The shortage of organs has pushed transplant surgeons to accept liver grafts with extended criteria, but severe vascular abnormalities may still discourage the use of otherwise acceptable organs. We report herein the case of a liver graft with a 64-mm aneurysm of the proper hepatic artery extended to the origin of the right and left hepatic branches. The graft was deemed unsuitable for transplant by all other centers in the region. However, liver function tests were normal, and there was no evidence of compromised arterial supply. At back table, we resected the aneurysm and anastomosed the right and left hepatic arteries to a vascular graft obtained from the distal tract of the donor's superior mesenteric artery. After portal reperfusion, we anastomosed the mesenteric graft to the recipient's hepatic artery at the origin of the gastroduodenal artery. The postoperative course and the subsequent 6-month follow-up were uneventful. In conclusion, the presence of a hepatic artery aneurysm should not be an absolute contraindication to the use of a liver graft. The present case emphasizes the possibility to utilize an organ that would have been otherwise discarded.

De Carlis, R., Andorno, E., Buscemi, V., Lauterio, A., Diviacco, P., Di Sandro, S., et al. (2020). Successful Transplant of a Liver Graft After Giant Hepatic Artery Aneurysm Resection and Reconstruction. EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 18(4), 522-525 [10.6002/ect.2019.0028].

Successful Transplant of a Liver Graft After Giant Hepatic Artery Aneurysm Resection and Reconstruction

Lauterio, Andrea;De Carlis, Luciano
2020

Abstract

The shortage of organs has pushed transplant surgeons to accept liver grafts with extended criteria, but severe vascular abnormalities may still discourage the use of otherwise acceptable organs. We report herein the case of a liver graft with a 64-mm aneurysm of the proper hepatic artery extended to the origin of the right and left hepatic branches. The graft was deemed unsuitable for transplant by all other centers in the region. However, liver function tests were normal, and there was no evidence of compromised arterial supply. At back table, we resected the aneurysm and anastomosed the right and left hepatic arteries to a vascular graft obtained from the distal tract of the donor's superior mesenteric artery. After portal reperfusion, we anastomosed the mesenteric graft to the recipient's hepatic artery at the origin of the gastroduodenal artery. The postoperative course and the subsequent 6-month follow-up were uneventful. In conclusion, the presence of a hepatic artery aneurysm should not be an absolute contraindication to the use of a liver graft. The present case emphasizes the possibility to utilize an organ that would have been otherwise discarded.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Transplant; Aneurysm;
English
14-mag-2019
2020
18
4
522
525
none
De Carlis, R., Andorno, E., Buscemi, V., Lauterio, A., Diviacco, P., Di Sandro, S., et al. (2020). Successful Transplant of a Liver Graft After Giant Hepatic Artery Aneurysm Resection and Reconstruction. EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 18(4), 522-525 [10.6002/ect.2019.0028].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/275531
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