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. 2023 May 24;9(6):e1488.
doi: 10.1097/TXD.0000000000001488. eCollection 2023 Jun.

Steroid Avoidance After Adult Living Donor Liver Transplant: A Cohort Analysis

Affiliations

Steroid Avoidance After Adult Living Donor Liver Transplant: A Cohort Analysis

Miguel Nunez et al. Transplant Direct. .

Abstract

Although steroid avoidance (SA) has been studied in deceased donor liver transplant, little is known about SA in living donor liver transplant (LDLT). We report the characteristics and outcomes, including the incidence of early acute rejection (AR) and complications of steroid use, in 2 cohorts of LDLT recipients.

Methods: Routine steroid maintenance (SM) after LDLT was stopped in December 2017. Our single-center retrospective cohort study spans 2 eras. Two hundred forty-two adult recipients underwent LDLT with SM (January 2000-December 2017), and 83 adult recipients (December 2017-August 2021) underwent LDLT with SA. Early AR was defined as a biopsy showing pathologic characteristics within 6 mo after LDLT. Univariate and multivariate logistic regressions were performed to evaluate the effects of relevant recipient and donor characteristics on the incidence of early AR in our cohort.

Results: Neither the difference in early AR rate between cohorts (SA 19/83 [22.9%] versus SM 41/242 [17%]; P = 0.46) nor a subset analysis of patients with autoimmune disease (SA 5/17 [29.4%] versus SM 19/58 [22.4%]; P = 0.71) reached statistical significance. Univariate and multivariate logistic regressions for early AR identified recipient age to be a statistically significant risk factor (P < 0.001). Of the patients without diabetes before LDLT, 3 of 56 (5.4%) on SA versus 26 of 200 (13%) on SM needed medications prescribed for glucose control at the time of discharge (P = 0.11). Patient survival was similar between SA and SM cohorts (SA 94% versus SM 91%, P = 0.34) 3 y after transplant.

Conclusions: LDLT recipients treated with SA do not exhibit significantly higher rates of rejection or increased mortality than patients treated with SM. Notably, this result is similar for recipients with autoimmune disease.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.

Figures

FIGURE 1.
FIGURE 1.
Kaplan-Meier curves for 3-y survival after transplantation. A, All transplant patients. B, Only patients with AI disease. The numbers in the bottom part of the figure depict the “number at risk.” SA, steroid avoidance; SM, steroid maintenance.

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