Transplantation Proceedings
Volume 39, Issue 10 , Pages 2977-2980, December 2007

Complications in the Right Lobe Adult Living Donor: Single-Center Experience in China

Center of Liver Transplantation, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Sichuan, Province, People’s Republic of China.

Abstract 

Introduction and Objective

Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has been accepted as an established treatment modality for end-stage liver diseases to alleviate the shortage of cadaveric organs. Reported complication rates for right lobe adult living donors vary, but are estimated to be approximately 35% with a surgical mortality rate of approximately 0.3%. Our objective was to evaluate the complications in right lobe adult living donors in a single center.

Materials and Methods

This retrospective review includes 62 adult living donors who underwent right hemi-hepatectomy between January 2002 and December 2006. Eighteen donors were men and 44 were women (range, 18–65 years; median age, 36 years). The mean follow-up time for the donors was 16 months (range, 3 months–4 years).

Results

All donors were alive and well at the end of the study period. Complications included pleural effusion (n = 6; 9.68%), bile leaks (n = 3; 4.84%), wound infection (n = 2; 3.23%), pneumonia (n = 2; 3.23%), chyle leak (n = 1; 1.61%), intra-abdominal bleeding (n = 1; 1.61%), subphrenic effusion (n = 1; 1.61%), portal vein thrombosis (n = 1; 1.61%), and chylothorax (n = 1; 1.61%). There was no donor mortality, and the overall complication rate was 29%.

Conclusions

The overall complication rate in the right lobe adult living donor was 29% in our center; there was no donor mortality. These complications could be avoided or overcome through intensive postoperative surveillance.

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PII: S0041-1345(07)01259-6

doi:10.1016/j.transproceed.2007.09.034

Transplantation Proceedings
Volume 39, Issue 10 , Pages 2977-2980, December 2007