Three-dimensional print of a liver for preoperative planning in living donor liver transplantation

Nizar N. Zein(Institut de Recherche en Santé Digestive), Ibrahim A. Hanouneh(Institut de Recherche en Santé Digestive), Paul D. Bishop, Maggie Samaan(Institut de Recherche en Santé Digestive), Bijan Eghtesad(Digestive Care (United States)), Cristiano Quintini(Digestive Care (United States)), Charles C. Miller(Digestive Care (United States)), Lisa Yerian(Cleveland Clinic), Ryan Klatte(Cleveland Clinic)
Liver Transplantation
August 20, 2013
Cited by 322Open Access
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Abstract

The growing demand for liver transplantation and the concomitant scarcity of cadaveric livers have increased the need for living donor liver transplantation (LDLT). Ensuring the safety of donors and recipients is critical. The preoperative identification of the vascular and biliary tract anatomy with 3-dimensional (3D) printing may allow better preoperative surgical planning, avert unnecessary surgery in patients with potentially unsuitable anatomy, and thereby decrease the complications of liver transplant surgery. We developed a protocol and successfully 3D-printed synthetic livers (along with their complex networks of vascular and biliary structures) replicating the native livers of 6 patients: 3 living donors and 3 respective recipients who underwent LDLT. To our knowledge, these are the first complete 3D-printed livers. Using standardized preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative assessments, we demonstrated identical anatomical and geometrical landmarks in the 3D-printed models and native livers.


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