TY - JOUR
T1 - Perioperative Skeletal Muscle Fluctuations in High-Acuity Liver Transplantation
AU - Chong, Jazlyn
AU - Guorgui, Jacob
AU - Coy, Heidi
AU - Ito, Takahiro
AU - Lu, Michelle
AU - DiNorcia, Joseph
AU - Agopian, Vatche G.
AU - Farmer, Douglas G.
AU - Raman, Steven S.
AU - Busuttil, Ronald W.
AU - Kaldas, Fady M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - Background: Frailty has been implicated as a negative predictor of Liver Transplant (LT) outcomes. However, an understanding of changes in patient muscle mass peri-LT, and their effect in high-acuity patients remains lacking. We examined the impact of perioperative muscle mass changes (ΔSMI) on high-acuity (MELD ≥35) LT recipients. Materials and Methods: Skeletal muscle index (SMI) was calculated using CT imaging. Patients were divided into two groups, based on severity of peri-operative SMI decrease. LT recipients with chronic end-stage liver disease, MELD ≥35, and abdominal CT ≤30 days prior, and 30-90 days post LT were included. [1011 adult LT recipients reviewed, 2012–2018]. Results: Of 1011 patients reviewed, 88 met inclusion criteria (median MELD 41.1). The median ΔSMI was -5.0 (-29.4 - +21.1 cm2/m2) (fig A). Patients were classified into two groups: ΔSMI<-5.0 (median ΔSMI: -0.4, n = 44) and ΔSMI>-5.0 (median ΔSMI: -9.2, n = 44). Recipients with ΔSMI<-5.0 had higher pre-LT SMI (35.4 versus 31.2 cm2/m2, P <0.001) and lower post-LT SMI (26.0 versus 30.8 cm2/m2, P <0.001). The ΔSMI<-5.0 group had higher early allograft dysfunction (40.9 versus 20.5%, P = 0.037), and inferior patient and graft survival (P = 0.015, 0.017, respectively). Multivariate analysis identified ΔSMI<-5.0 (HR: 2.938, P = 0.048), long cold-ischemia time (≥9h, HR: 7.332, P = 0.008), HCV (HR: 5.614, p = 0.001), and tracheostomy after LT (HR:9.218, P <0.001) as negative prognostic factors for patient survival. Conclusions: Progressive perioperative sarcopenic deterioration was associated with inferior patient and graft survival in high acuity LT. These findings may guide pre and post-operative patient care and rehabilitation efforts in this challenging patient population.
AB - Background: Frailty has been implicated as a negative predictor of Liver Transplant (LT) outcomes. However, an understanding of changes in patient muscle mass peri-LT, and their effect in high-acuity patients remains lacking. We examined the impact of perioperative muscle mass changes (ΔSMI) on high-acuity (MELD ≥35) LT recipients. Materials and Methods: Skeletal muscle index (SMI) was calculated using CT imaging. Patients were divided into two groups, based on severity of peri-operative SMI decrease. LT recipients with chronic end-stage liver disease, MELD ≥35, and abdominal CT ≤30 days prior, and 30-90 days post LT were included. [1011 adult LT recipients reviewed, 2012–2018]. Results: Of 1011 patients reviewed, 88 met inclusion criteria (median MELD 41.1). The median ΔSMI was -5.0 (-29.4 - +21.1 cm2/m2) (fig A). Patients were classified into two groups: ΔSMI<-5.0 (median ΔSMI: -0.4, n = 44) and ΔSMI>-5.0 (median ΔSMI: -9.2, n = 44). Recipients with ΔSMI<-5.0 had higher pre-LT SMI (35.4 versus 31.2 cm2/m2, P <0.001) and lower post-LT SMI (26.0 versus 30.8 cm2/m2, P <0.001). The ΔSMI<-5.0 group had higher early allograft dysfunction (40.9 versus 20.5%, P = 0.037), and inferior patient and graft survival (P = 0.015, 0.017, respectively). Multivariate analysis identified ΔSMI<-5.0 (HR: 2.938, P = 0.048), long cold-ischemia time (≥9h, HR: 7.332, P = 0.008), HCV (HR: 5.614, p = 0.001), and tracheostomy after LT (HR:9.218, P <0.001) as negative prognostic factors for patient survival. Conclusions: Progressive perioperative sarcopenic deterioration was associated with inferior patient and graft survival in high acuity LT. These findings may guide pre and post-operative patient care and rehabilitation efforts in this challenging patient population.
KW - Frailty
KW - High-acuity
KW - Liver transplant
KW - Sarcopenia
KW - Skeletal-muscle-index changes
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jss.2021.09.030
DO - 10.1016/j.jss.2021.09.030
M3 - Article
C2 - 34739998
AN - SCOPUS:85118509106
SN - 0022-4804
VL - 270
SP - 386
EP - 393
JO - Journal of Surgical Research
JF - Journal of Surgical Research
ER -