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Review
. 2018 Apr;1864(4 Pt B):1507-1515.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2017.06.013. Epub 2017 Jun 20.

Post-transplant cholangiopathy: Classification, pathogenesis, and preventive strategies

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Free article
Review

Post-transplant cholangiopathy: Classification, pathogenesis, and preventive strategies

Yvonne de Vries et al. Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis. 2018 Apr.
Free article

Abstract

Biliary complications are the most frequent cause of morbidity, re-transplantation, and even mortality after liver transplantation. In general, biliary leakage and anastomotic and non-anastomotic biliary strictures (NAS) can be recognized. There is no consensus on the exact definition of NAS and different names and criteria have been used in literature. We propose to use the term post-transplant cholangiopathy for the spectrum of abnormalities of large donor bile ducts, that includes NAS, but also intraductal casts and intrahepatic biloma formation, in the presence of a patent hepatic artery. Combinations of these manifestations of cholangiopathy are not infrequently found in the same liver and ischemia-reperfusion injury is generally considered the common underlying mechanism. Other factors that contribute to post-transplant cholangiopathy are biliary injury due to bile salt toxicity and immune-mediated injury. This review provides an overview of the various types of post-transplant cholangiopathy, the presumed pathogenesis, clinical implications, and preventive strategies.

Keywords: Donation after circulatory death; Ischemia-reperfusion injury; Ischemic-type biliary lesions; Liver transplantation; Non-anastomotic biliary strictures; Post-transplant cholangiopathy.

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