End-stage Liver Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Randomized Trial Comparing the Clinical Efficiency of Conventional Versus Piggyback Method in Venous Drainage of the Transplanted Liver
METHODS: Patients were submitted to conventional (n=15) or piggyback (n=17) liver transplantation (LTx). Free hepatic vein pressure (FHVP) and the central venous pressure (CVP) measurements were performed after graft reperfusion. Postoperative (PO) serum creatinine (Cr) was measured, acute renal failure (ARF) was defined as Cr > or = 2,0mg/dL and PO renal function was analyzed by modificated RIFLE-AKIN. PO overall Cr was calculated by area under the curve (AUC) of Cr vs. time. on the first week.
Thirty-two patients recruited among liver transplant recipients submitted to surgery at the
Liver Unit at the Hospital das Clínicas of the University of São Paulo Medical School
between 8 th October, 1999 and 30 rd September, 2000 were studied. The patients were
assigned by randomization to two groups: transplant performed using the conventional or the
piggyback method. These patients are part of a larger clinical trial where pulmonary
alterations are compared between patients operated using the conventional method with
venovenous bypass and the piggyback method.(10) Inclusion criteria admitted of both genders,
aged 18 years or older, submitted to a first elective LTx, with no clinical or technical
reasons justifying a preferential option by conventional or piggyback method. For this
reason, we excluded patients submitted to living donor LTx, in whom IVC is routinely
preserved and those with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy, whom, in our routine, are
routinely submitted to conventional LTx.
The randomization process was performed by a team of nurses not involved with the
intraoperative care of the patients. This was obtained by "coin-tossing". In each case,
randomization was paired according to the Child-Pugh's Score, calculated immediately before
surgery. Stratification was performed by blocking randomization in each subset of patient
(scores A, B, or C), with blocks of size 2 with a one-to-one allocation ratio. Thus, while
the first patient of each Child-Pugh score was effectively randomized, the second was
automatically allocated to the opposite surgical method, completing a pair. However, the
investigators had no influence on the second recipient selection due to the characteristics
of the organ allocation system in Brazil, former MELD scale criteria was introduced. In that
time, the graft distribution was according to four distinct blood groups (A,B,AB,O)
generated a greater obstacle to predicting who would be the next patient as related to what
would be obtained if blocks of 4 size have been used.
Surgeries of donor and of recipient were performed with small adaptations in the usual
technique in order to evaluate the pressure gradient between the hepatic vein and the right
atrium in the two groups. In the conventional method IVC was clamped during the anhepatic
phase and venous return was maintained by a portal femoral axillary venovenous bypass with a
centrifugal pump. In these cases, IVC reconstruction was performed by end-to-end anastomosis
above and below the liver. In the piggyback method IVC was not clamped in any case.
Implantation method of the grafted IVC in recipient IVC was not standardized, being defined
by the responsible surgeon during the procedure. In the two groups, all patients were
submitted to simultaneous arterial and portal revascularization, according to the routine of
the service.
Free hepatic vein pressure (FHVP) was measured using an 8F polyethylene catheter with a
multiperforated distal end, which was positioned in the graft's right hepatic vein during ex
situ preparation on the back table. The proximal end of this catheter was exteriorized in
the infrahepatic portion of IVC. In the conventional group, exteriorization was performed
through the anastomosis suture. In the piggyback group, IVC was ligated around the catheter.
Central venous pressure (CVP) was obtained using a Swan-Ganz catheter (routine procedure).
Measurement of hepatic vein and right atrium pressure was made once, after concluding
biliary anastomosis.
All measurements were obtained with the same transducer, determining as zero reference level
the median axillary line. Pressure measurement was performed in apnea in order to avoid that
the patient's respiratory incursions would determine oscillations in the pressure curve.
When oscillations persisted in spite of this maneuver, the arithmetic mean of the observed
maximum and minimum values was recorded. "hepatic venous block" was considered when a
pressure gradient higher than 3 mm Hg was present.(4) Serum creatinine (Cr) was determined
in the preoperatory period (immediately before surgery), on postoperative days (PO) 1 to 7
and on 14, 21 and 28. Occurrence of acute renal failure (ARF) was defined as postoperative
creatinine peak > or = 2.0. (8) For each case, the area under the curve (AUC) Cr vs. time,
calculated by the trapezoidal method (11) and divided by the postoperative observation time
(28 days), was used as a postoperative overall creatinine parameter. Each group,
conventional and piggyback, are also analyzed according to the RIFLE which classifies ARF in
three grades of increasing severity: risk (class R), injury (class I) and failure (class F)
- and two outcome classes - loss and end-stage kidney disease. RIFLE classification provides
these grades based on changes in either Cr or urine output from the baseline condition. The
RIFLE criteria is an important tool to help the international community compare data on ARF
and was validated elsewhere (12, 13), being modified in 2005 as RIFLE-AKIN (14). For
statistical analysis, in this study, the Class R are unified with the group of patients
without renal injuries (considered as nule alterations), and the patients with class I and F
were unified. The outcome classes are late consequences of the LTx and were not studied in
the present clinical trial.
Postoperative massive ascites was considered as abdominal fluid accumulation with a volume
over 500 ml/day for more than 30 days (6) evaluated through body weight, abdominal drain
output or paracentesis.
The patients were followed up until 30 rd June, 2006, recording the date of death of those
who died.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT05001009 -
Goals of Care Conversations Study
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT00656266 -
Trial of Calcineurin Inhibitor-Sparing Immunosuppression Regimen in Pediatric Liver Transplantation
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT02166177 -
Safety and Efficacy Study of Regulatory T Cell Therapy in Liver Transplant Patients
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT02478151 -
Using Ex-vivo Normothermic Machine Perfusion With the Organox Metraâ„¢ Device to Store Human Livers for Transplantation
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT00913276 -
Conditioning With Volatile Anesthetics in Liver Transplantation
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04572373 -
Supplements SMOF in TPN for Liver Transplantation Recipients
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06242405 -
Effect of Different Frequencies of Umbilical Cord-mesenchymal Stem Cells Through Peripheral Vein in Patients With ESLD
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06400498 -
Surprise Question in End of Life (SeQuEL) Care and the Effect of Prompting Palliative Care Consultation: End-Stage Liver Disease
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05750329 -
Liver Transplantation With Two-stage Liver Resection in Unresectable Liver Cancer , Metastases or Emd-stage Liver Disease (LTLR-LC)
|
N/A |