Long-Term Patency of All-in-One Sleeve Patch Graft Venoplasty in 16 Patients Who Underwent Living Donor Liver Transplantation with a Right Liver Graft: A 10-Year, Single-Center, Retrospective Study.
Byeong Gon NaShin HwangDong Hwan JungChul-Soo AhnDeok Bog MoonTae-Yong HaKi Won SongGil-Chun ParkSung Gyu LeePublished in: Annals of transplantation (2022)
BACKGROUND This retrospective study from a single center aimed to evaluate the long-term patency of all-in-one sleeve venoplasty (ASV) in 16 patients who underwent living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) with a right liver graft (RLG) between 2009 and 2019. ASV unifies the right hepatic vein (RHV), short hepatic vein (SHV), and middle hepatic vein (MHV) of an RLG. ASV enables wide side-to-side anastomosis to the recipient inferior vena cava (IVC). MATERIAL AND METHODS Of 2875 patients who underwent LDLT with an RLG from August 2009 to July 2019, 16 (0.5%) patients underwent ASV. We analyzed the ASV techniques applied to these patients, as well as patient long-term outcomes. RESULTS Type 1 ASV unified 1 RHV, 1 IRHV, and 1 MHV conduit (n=12 [75.0%]). Type 2 ASV unified 1 RHV, multiple IRHVs, and 1 MHV conduit (n=4 [25.0%]). All patients are currently alive, with a mean follow-up period of 70.1±41.9 months. No patient underwent retransplantation. Follow-up computed tomography showed SHV occlusion in 1 (6.3%) patient at 4 months, resulting in 1-, 3-, and 5-year SHV patency rates of 93.8% each. MHV occlusion was identified in 6 (37.5%) patients, with 1-, 3-, and 5-year MHV patency rates of 81.3%, 68.8%, and 68.8%, respectively (P=0.037). No patient underwent endovascular stenting of the SHV or MHV. Patency rates were significantly higher for SHV than MHV (P=0.037). CONCLUSIONS ASV using various vascular patches is a useful technique enabling secure reconstruction of an RLG in grafts with complex hepatic vein anatomy or recipients with poor IVC condition.