Preoperative data
Male patients predominated in the two groups of patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure (Table 1). For patients with cirrhosis and acute deterioration, the median age was similar to that of the patients with cirrhosis only, and they were older than the patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and those with fulminant hepatic failure. Reactivation of hepatitis B was the cause of deterioration in all of the patients in group 2. Factors that induced the viral reactivation were largely unknown, but steroid and herbal medicine might have been responsible for 18 (36%) patients (Table 2). Drugs were also a possible cause of acute deterioration in 14 (14%) patients with cirrhosis (group 3). Other factors included Wilson disease and superimposed hepatitis E.
Table 1 Preoperative data
Table 2 Possible factors leading to acute exacerbation of hepatitis B and acute deterioration of cirrhotic patients
About 60% of the patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure were intensive care unit bound before liver transplantation (Table 1). The incidence was less than that of the patients with fulminant hepatic failure (versus group 2, P = 0.034; versus group 3, P = 0.006). Fifty-four percent of the patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and 36% of the cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration lapsed into stage 3 or 4 coma before operation. The incidence was lower for cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration than that of the patients with fulminant hepatic failure (P = 0.001). The median MELD scores of the patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration were 37 and 35, respectively. The values were similar to those of the patients with fulminant hepatic failure and were definitely higher than those of the patients with cirrhosis only (Table 1).
Infection was identified before liver transplantation in 32% of the patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and in 36.4% of the cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration (Tables 1 and 3). The incidence was higher than that of patients with fulminant hepatic failure (versus group 2, P = 0.131; versus group 3, P = 0.038) and that of patients with cirrhosis only (versus group 2, P < 0.001; versus group 3, P < 0.001). Twenty-two (14.8%) patients having acute-on-chronic liver failure had positive blood culture results (Tables 1 and 3). Hepatorenal syndrome was diagnosed in 16 (32%) patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and in 41 (41.4%) cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration. The incidence, though higher, was not significantly higher than that of the patients with fulminant hepatic failure (27%) (versus group 2, P = 0.39; versus group 3, P = 0.088). Six (16%), eight (16%), 20 (20%), and 0 patients in the four groups, respectively, required preoperative hemodialysis. Seventeen (34%) patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and 26 (26%) cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration required mechanical ventilation. The incidence was lower than that of the patients with fulminant hepatic failure (versus group 2, P = 0.049; versus group 3, P = 0.003).
Table 3 Bacteriology of cultures of fluid according to patient groups and sites of origin
Intraoperative data
Three hundred four (62.4%) patients underwent LDLT and 183 (37.6%) patients received DDLT. The proportions of LDLT in the four groups were 83, 78, 65.7, and 56.4%, respectively (Table 4). There was no statistical difference in the weight of the grafts they received, irrespective of graft types. Cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration had the highest blood transfusion requirement (versus group 1, P = 0.091; versus group 2, P = 0.021; versus group 4, P < 0.001). However, seven (18.9%), five (10%), three (3%), and 66 (21.9%) patients in groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively, did not require exogenous blood transfusion. Seven patients required intraoperative hemodialysis. Five of them were cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration.
Table 4 Intraoperative data
Pathological data
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was found in the liver explants of 11 (11.1%) cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration and 105 (34%) patients having cirrhosis only (Table 4) but not in any of the explants from patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B. The finding of HCC was incidental in five (45.5%) cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration because thorough imaging of the liver had not been carried out before the emergency transplantation. However, almost 90% of the HCCs in this group were in early stage. Etiologies of cirrhosis (according to pathology of the explants) were similar in groups 3 and 4 (Table 5). The causes for fulminant hepatic failure are as follows: acute hepatitis B in 11 patients, drug intoxication in 12 patients, and unknown in 13 patients.
Table 5 Etiologies of cirrhosis based on explant pathology
Postoperative data
Early complications (<30 days) occurred in 62% of the patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and in 70.7% of the cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration (Table 6). The incidence in the latter group was higher than that of the patients with cirrhosis only (P < 0.001). However, the incidence of reoperations for complications was similar among the four groups, regardless of whether the initial operations were LDLT or DDLT. Patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure had a higher need for hemodialysis after operation. Their durations of intensive care unit stay were also longer than those of the patients having cirrhosis only (versus group 2, P = 0.014; versus group 3, P < 0.001). However, among patients in groups 1, 2, and 3, patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B had the shortest hospital stay. Their recovery of liver and renal functions was rapid and similar to that of the patients with cirrhosis (Fig. 1). Patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure had significantly higher serum creatinine levels on postoperative days 1, 2, and 3.
Table 6 Postoperative and survival data
Survival data
The hospital mortality rates were 4.0 and 5.1% for patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration, respectively (Table 6). The hospital mortality rate of all patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure was 4.7%, which was not significantly higher than that of patients with fulminant hepatic failure (2.7%) and that of patients with cirrhosis only (7%). Five (71.4%) of the seven patients who needed intraoperative hemodialysis died. Causes of hospital mortality are listed in Table 7. Multivariate analyses of preoperative parameters (age, pretransplant status, MELD score, platelet count, presence of hepatic encephalopathy, infection or hepatorenal syndrome, and need for preoperative hemodialysis or mechanical ventilatory support), intraoperative parameters (LDLT versus DDLT, graft weight-to-estimated standard liver volume ratio, graft weight-to-recipient body weight ratio, volume of blood transfusion, volume of fresh frozen plasma transfusion, platelet concentrates, and need for intraoperative hemodialysis), and diagnosis groups showed that intraoperative blood transfusion volume was the only significant factor that could predict hospital mortality (relative risk, 1.119; 95% confidence interval, 1.077–1.163). According to discriminant analysis, blood transfusion volume of 14.5 l was the cutoff level that could predict hospital mortality.
Table 7 Causes of hospital mortalities
The median follow-up durations of the four groups of patients were 73.4, 53.9, 55.5, and 46.9 months, respectively, and the ranges were 3.3–172.1, 0.37–149.1, 0.33–149.9, and 0–179.1 months, respectively. There was no default in follow-up. The 1-year graft survival rate exceeded 90% in all four groups of patients. The estimated 5-year survival rates of patients with acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B and cirrhotic patients with acute deterioration were 93.2 and 90.5%, respectively (Table 6). Causes of late mortalities are listed in Table 8. According to the Cox proportional hazards model, factors leading to late mortality were MELD score (relative risk, 0.959; 95% confidence interval, 0.935–0.984) and the need for intraoperative hemodialysis (relative risk, 11.415; 95% confidence interval, 2.471–52.765). Because the MELD score had a paradoxical effect on late mortality, a further analysis was carried out. It was identified that many HCC patients who died of tumor recurrence had low MELD scores. After excluding the HCC patients, repeated multivariate analyses showed that graft type (i.e., living donor graft) was associated with better survival (relative risk, 0.509; 95% confidence interval, 0.265–0.98).
Table 8 Causes of late mortalities
Further analysis was performed to exclude the influence of HCC on long-term survival. After excluding the HCC patients in groups 3 and 4, the difference in survival was still significant, with group 3 patients having better long-term survival rates (Fig. 2).
Fourteen patients underwent retransplantation because of primary non-function (n = 1), hepatic artery thrombosis (n = 2), portal vein thrombosis (n = 5), bile duct stricture (n = 1), unknown hepatitis (n = 2), recurrent hepatitis B (n = 2), and recurrent hepatitis C (n = 2). Because the retransplantation rate was low, the overall patient survival rates were similar to the graft survival rates (Table 6). The overall survival rates of patients receiving DDLT and those having LDLT were not dissimilar in all the four groups (Fig. 3).