Defining Benchmarks in Liver Transplantation

Xavier Muller(University Hospital of Zurich), Francesca Marcon(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Gonzalo Sapisochín(University of Toronto), Max Marquez(University of Toronto), Fédérica Dondero(Hôpital Beaujon), Michel Rayar, Majella M.B. Doyle(Washington University in St. Louis), Lauren Callans(University Hospital of Zurich), Jun Li(Universität Hamburg), Greg Nowak(Karolinska University Hospital), Marc-Antoine Allard(Hôpital Beaujon), Ina Jochmans(KU Leuven), Kyle Jacskon(Johns Hopkins Hospital), M. Chahdi Beltrame(Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires), Marjolein van Reeven(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Samuele Iesari(University of Toronto), Alessandro Cucchetti(Hôpital Beaujon), Hemant Sharma(Western University), Roxane D. Staiger(University Hospital of Zurich), Dimitri Aristotle Raptis(University Hospital of Zurich), Henrik Petrowsky(University Hospital of Zurich), Michelle de Oliveira(University Hospital of Zurich), Roberto Hernandez‐Alejandro(Western University), Antonio D. Pinna(Hôpital Beaujon), Jan Lerut(University of Toronto), Wojciech G. Polak(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Eduardo de Santibáñes(Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires), Martín de Santibañes(Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires), Andrew M. Cameron(Johns Hopkins Hospital), Jacques Pirenne(KU Leuven), Daniel Cherqui(Hôpital Beaujon), René Adam(Hôpital Beaujon), Bo-Göran Ericzon(Karolinska University Hospital), Bjoern Nashan(Universität Hamburg), Kim M. Olthoff(University Hospital of Zurich), A. Shaked(University Hospital of Zurich), William C. Chapman(Washington University in St. Louis), Karim Boudjéma, Olivier Soubrane(Hôpital Beaujon), Cathérine Paugam‐Burtz(Hôpital Beaujon), Paul D. Greig(University of Toronto), David Grant(University of Toronto), A. Carvalheiro(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Paolo Muiesan(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Philipp Dutkowski(University Hospital of Zurich), Milo A. Puhan(University of Zurich), Pierre-Alain Clavien(University Hospital of Zurich)
Annals of Surgery
September 7, 2017
Cited by 250Open Access

Abstract

This multicentric study of 17 high-volume centers presents 12 benchmark values for liver transplantation. Those values, mostly targeting markers of morbidity, were gathered from 2024 “low risk” cases, and may serve as reference to assess outcome of single or any groups of patients. Objective: To propose benchmark outcome values in liver transplantation, serving as reference for assessing individual patients or any other patient groups. Background: Best achievable results in liver transplantation, that is, benchmarks, are unknown. Consequently, outcome comparisons within or across centers over time remain speculative. Methods: Out of 7492 liver transplantation performed in 17 international centers from 3 continents, we identified 2024 low risk adult cases with a laboratory model for end-stage liver disease score ≤20 points, a balance of risk score ≤9, and receiving a primary graft by donation after brain death. We chose clinically relevant endpoints covering intra- and postoperative course, with a focus on complications graded by severity including the complication comprehensive index (CCI®). Respective benchmarks were derived from the median value in each center, and the 75 percentile was considered the benchmark cutoff. Results: Benchmark cases represented 8% to 49% of cases per center. One-year patient-survival was 91.6% with 3.5% retransplantations. Eighty-two percent of patients developed at least 1 complication during 1-year follow-up. Biliary complications occurred in one-fifth of the patients up to 6 months after surgery. Benchmark cutoffs were ≤4 days for ICU stay, ≤18 days for hospital stay, ≤59% for patients with severe complications (≥ Grade III) and ≤42.1 for 1-year CCI®. Comparisons with the next higher risk group (model for end stage liver disease 21–30) disclosed an increase in morbidity but within benchmark cutoffs for most, but not all indicators, while in patients receiving a second graft from 1 center (n = 50) outcome values were all outside of benchmark values. Conclusions: Despite excellent 1-year survival, morbidity in benchmark cases remains high with half of patients developing severe complications during 1-year follow-up. Benchmark cutoffs targeting morbidity parameters offer a valid tool to assess higher risk groups.


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