Optimizing Post-Kasai Management in Biliary Atresia: Balancing Native Liver Survival and Transplant Timing.

IF 1.5 3区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Omid Madadi-Sanjani, Marie Uecker, Gordon Thomas, Lutz Fischer, Bianca Hegen, Jochen Herrmann, Konrad Reinshagen, Christian Tomuschat
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Abstract

Background:  Kasai procedure (KPE) is a palliative intervention in infants with biliary atresia (BA) aiming to restore biliary drainage. While the measure of success in BA is the post-Kasai native liver survival (NLS), BA remains the most frequent indication for liver transplantation in children. While a considerable amount of children fail to clear their jaundice following KPE, resulting in early liver failure and transplantation, some children become jaundice-free after "successful" KPE. However, sequelae of chronic liver disease might affect those children, becoming a later risk for NLS. While liver transplantation is inevitable in the majority of children, various salvage procedures have been recently described to maintain NLS. This article provides a comprehensive overview of procedures performed after KPE to prolong NLS in BA patients from early childhood to late adulthood and discusses their indications and limitations.

Methods:  A literature-based search for surgical and radiological interventions performed in BA patients after KPE to prolong NLS (salvage procedures) was performed using PubMed. Data from case reports, retrospective studies, and registries were included.

Results:  Fifteen studies included 794 patients who underwent post-KPE salvage procedures. The Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine levels were IIc to IV.Interventions included redo-Kasai's (n = 710) for cessation of bile flow post-KPE, surgical and radiological procedures (n = 14) for bile lakes, and recurrent cholangitis, shunt surgery (n = 49), and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (n = 21) for portal hypertension in BA patients. Age at the time of salvage interventions varied considerably, including redo-Kasai's at 27 days of life and percutaneous biliary interventions in a 35-year-old.

Conclusion:  Salvage procedures can maintain NLS after KPE in BA patients with disease sequelae. However, indications remain scarce and liver transplantation is ultimately unavoidable in the majority of patients. While redo-Kasai numbers are globally decreasing with the advances in liver transplantation, procedures for bile lakes and portal hypertension can be viable options for patients with complications but otherwise stable liver function. Discussion on those procedures should be held by multidisciplinary expert teams, involving pediatric hepatologists, pediatric surgeons, and transplant surgeons to elaborate on the potential of maintaining NLS or proceeding with transplantation.

优化开赛后胆道闭锁的管理:平衡原生肝脏生存和移植时机。
背景Kasai手术(KPE)是一种针对胆道闭锁(BA)婴儿的姑息性干预,旨在恢复胆道引流。虽然BA成功的衡量标准是开赛后的原生肝存活,但BA仍然是儿童肝移植最常见的指征。虽然相当多的儿童在KPE后黄疸不能清除,导致早期肝衰竭和移植,但一些儿童在“成功”的KPE后没有黄疸。然而,慢性肝病的后遗症可能会影响到这些儿童,成为天然肝脏生存(NLS)的后期风险。虽然肝移植在大多数儿童中是不可避免的,但最近已经描述了各种挽救程序来维持NLS。本文全面概述了KPE后延长BA患者从儿童早期到成年晚期的原生肝脏生存的手术,并讨论了其适应症和局限性。方法利用PubMed对KPE后BA患者进行外科和放射干预以延长NLS(抢救手术)的文献进行检索。数据来自病例报告、回顾性研究和登记。结果15项研究包括794例患者接受了kpe后抢救手术。牛津循证医学中心的水平为IIc至IV。干预措施包括用于kpe后胆汁流停止的redo-Kasai (n=710),用于胆管湖和复发性胆管炎的手术和放射治疗(n=14),用于BA患者门静脉高压的分流手术(n=49)和TIPS (n=21)。抢救干预时的年龄差异很大,包括27天的redo-Kasai和35岁的经皮胆道干预。结论BA有疾病后遗症的患者KPE后,救助性手术可维持NLS。然而,适应症仍然很少,大多数患者最终无法进行肝移植。虽然随着肝移植技术的进步,全球范围内的redo-Kasai数量正在减少,但对于有并发症但肝功能稳定的患者来说,胆囊湖和门静脉高压症手术是可行的选择。儿科肝病学家、儿科外科医生和移植外科医生等多学科专家小组应就这些手术进行讨论,以详细说明维持原生肝脏存活或继续进行移植的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
5.60%
发文量
66
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: This broad-based international journal updates you on vital developments in pediatric surgery through original articles, abstracts of the literature, and meeting announcements. You will find state-of-the-art information on: abdominal and thoracic surgery neurosurgery urology gynecology oncology orthopaedics traumatology anesthesiology child pathology embryology morphology Written by surgeons, physicians, anesthesiologists, radiologists, and others involved in the surgical care of neonates, infants, and children, the EJPS is an indispensable resource for all specialists.
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