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Inferior graft survival of hepatitis B core positive grafts is not influenced by post‐transplant hepatitis B infection in liver recipients—A 35‐year single‐center experience
Authors:Andreas Brandl  Philipp Stolzlechner  Stephan Eschertzhuber  Felix Aigner  Sascha Weiss  Wolfgang Vogel  Alexander Krannich  Sabrina Neururer  Johann Pratschke  Ivo Graziadei  Robert Öllinger
Affiliation:1. Department of Visceral‐, Transplant‐, and Thoracic Surgery, Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria;2. Department of General, Visceral, Vascular and Thoracic Surgery, Charité Campus Mitte, Berlin, Germany;3. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria;4. Department of Internal Medicine II, Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria;5. Department of Biostatistics, Coordination Center for Clinical Trials, Charité Universit?tsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany;6. Department of Medical Statistics, Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria;7. Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, Charité Campus Virchow‐Klinikum, Berlin, Germany;8. Department of Internal Medicine, District Hospital Hall, Innsbruck, Austria
Abstract:Nonoptimal liver grafts, and among them organs from anti‐HBc+ donors, are increasingly used for liver transplantation. In this retrospective study including 1065 adult liver transplantations performed between 1977 and 2012, we analyzed long‐term patient and graft survival and occurrence of HBV infection. A total of 52 (5.1%) patients received an anti‐HBc+ graft. The 10‐year graft and patient survival of these recipients were 50.9% and 59.0% compared to 72.0% and 76.5% (P = 0.001; P = 0.004) of patients receiving anti‐HBc‐ grafts, respectively. Cox regression model showed that high urgency allocation (P = 0.003), recipient age (P = 0.027), anti‐HCV+ recipients (P = 0.005), and anti‐HBc+ organs (P = 0.048) are associated with decreased graft survival. Thirteen of 52 (25.0%) patients receiving anti‐HBc+ grafts developed post‐transplant HBV infection within a mean of 2.8 years. In this study, antiviral prophylaxis did not have significant impact on HBV infection, but long‐term survival (P = 0.008). Development of post‐transplant HBV infection did not affect adjusted 10‐year graft survival (100% vs. 100%; P = 1). Anti‐HBc+ liver grafts can be transplanted with reasonable but inferior long‐term patient and graft survival. The inferior graft survival is not, however, related with post‐transplant HBV infection as long as early diagnosis and treatment take place.
Keywords:anti‐HBc+ grafts  antiviral prophylaxis  Lamivudine resistance  post‐transplant HBV infection
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