TY - JOUR
T1 - Deceased donor liver utilisation and assessment
T2 - Consensus guidelines from the European Liver and Intestine Transplant Association
AU - Hessheimer, Amelia J.
AU - Hartog, Hermien
AU - Marcon, Francesca
AU - Schlegel, Andrea
AU - Adam, René
AU - Alwayn, Ian
AU - Angelico, Roberta
AU - Antoine, Corinne
AU - Berlakovich, Gabriela
AU - Bruggenwirth, Isabel
AU - Calatayud, David
AU - Cardini, Benno
AU - Cillo, Umberto
AU - Clavien, Pierre Alain
AU - Czigany, Zoltan
AU - De Carlis, Riccardo
AU - de Jonge, Jeroen
AU - De Meijer, Vincent E.
AU - Dondossola, Daniele
AU - Domínguez-Gil, Beatriz
AU - Dutkowski, Philipp
AU - Eden, Janina
AU - Eshmuminov, Dilmurodjon
AU - Fundora, Yiliam
AU - Gastaca, Mikel
AU - Ghinolfi, Davide
AU - Justo, Iago
AU - Lesurtel, Mickael
AU - Leuvenink, Henri
AU - Line, Pal Dag
AU - Lladó, Laura
AU - López López, Víctor
AU - Lurje, Georg
AU - Marín, Luís Miguel
AU - Monbaliu, Diethard
AU - Muller, Xavier
AU - Nadalin, Silvio
AU - Nasralla, David
AU - Oniscu, Gabriel
AU - Patrono, Damiano
AU - Pirenne, Jacques
AU - Selzner, Markus
AU - Toso, Christian
AU - Troisi, Roberto
AU - Van Beekum, Cornelius
AU - Watson, Christopher
AU - Weissenbacher, Annemarie
AU - Zieniewicz, Krzysztof
AU - Schneeberger, Stefan
AU - Polak, Wojciech G.
AU - Porte, Robert J.
AU - Fondevila, Constantino
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 European Association for the Study of the Liver
PY - 2025/4/4
Y1 - 2025/4/4
N2 - Over the past two decades, the application of machine perfusion (MP) in human liver transplantation has moved from the realm of clinical exploration to routine clinical practice. Both in situ and ex situ perfusion strategies are feasible, safe, and may offer improvements in relevant post-transplant outcomes. An important utility of these strategies is the ability to transplant grafts traditionally considered too risky to transplant using conventional cold storage alone. While dynamic assessment and ultimately transplantation of such livers is an important goal for the international liver transplant community, its clinical application is inconsistent. To this end, ELITA (the European Liver and Intestine Transplant Association) gathered a panel of experts to create consensus guidelines regarding selection, approach, and criteria for deceased donor liver assessment in the MP era. An eight-member steering committee (SC) convened a panel of 44 professionals working in 14 countries in Europe and North America. The SC identified topics related to liver utilisation and assessment for transplantation. For each topic, subtopics were created to answer specific clinical questions. A systematic literature review was performed, and the panel graded relevant evidence. The SC drafted initial statements addressing each clinical question. Statements were presented at the in-person Consensus Meeting on Liver Discard and Viability Assessment during the ELITA Summit held from April 19-20, 2024, in Madrid, Spain. Online voting was held to approve statements according to a modified Delphi method; statements reaching ≥85% agreement were approved. Statements addressing liver utilisation, the definition of high-risk livers, and strategies and criteria for dynamic liver assessment are presented.
AB - Over the past two decades, the application of machine perfusion (MP) in human liver transplantation has moved from the realm of clinical exploration to routine clinical practice. Both in situ and ex situ perfusion strategies are feasible, safe, and may offer improvements in relevant post-transplant outcomes. An important utility of these strategies is the ability to transplant grafts traditionally considered too risky to transplant using conventional cold storage alone. While dynamic assessment and ultimately transplantation of such livers is an important goal for the international liver transplant community, its clinical application is inconsistent. To this end, ELITA (the European Liver and Intestine Transplant Association) gathered a panel of experts to create consensus guidelines regarding selection, approach, and criteria for deceased donor liver assessment in the MP era. An eight-member steering committee (SC) convened a panel of 44 professionals working in 14 countries in Europe and North America. The SC identified topics related to liver utilisation and assessment for transplantation. For each topic, subtopics were created to answer specific clinical questions. A systematic literature review was performed, and the panel graded relevant evidence. The SC drafted initial statements addressing each clinical question. Statements were presented at the in-person Consensus Meeting on Liver Discard and Viability Assessment during the ELITA Summit held from April 19-20, 2024, in Madrid, Spain. Online voting was held to approve statements according to a modified Delphi method; statements reaching ≥85% agreement were approved. Statements addressing liver utilisation, the definition of high-risk livers, and strategies and criteria for dynamic liver assessment are presented.
KW - donation after brain death
KW - donation after circulatory determination of death
KW - hypothermia
KW - liver transplantation
KW - machine perfusion
KW - normothermia
KW - normothermic regional perfusion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001818178&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhep.2025.01.042
DO - 10.1016/j.jhep.2025.01.042
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105001818178
SN - 0168-8278
JO - Journal of Hepatology
JF - Journal of Hepatology
ER -