Management of difficult hepatic artery reconstructions to reduce complications through continual technical refinements in living donor liver transplantations

Tsan Shiun Lin, Cen Hung Lin, Pao Jen Kuo, Johnson Chia Shen Yang, Yuan Cheng Chiang, Wei Feng Li, Shih Ho Wang, Chih Che Lin, Yueh Wei Liu, Chee Chien Yong, Chao Long Chen, Yu Fan Cheng, Chih Chi Wang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Hepatic artery reconstruction (HAR) for liver transplantation is crucial for successful outcomes. We evaluated transplantation outcome improvement through continual technical refinements. Materials and methods: HAR was performed in 1448 living donor liver transplants by a single plastic surgeon from 2008 to 2020. Difficult HARs were defined as graft or recipient hepatic artery ≤2 mm, size discrepancy (≥2 to 1), multiple hepatic arteries, suboptimal quality, intimal dissection of graft or recipient hepatic artery (HA), and immediate redo during transplantation. Technique refinements include early vessel injury recognition, precise HA dissection, the use of clips to ligate branches, an oblique cut for all HARs, a modified funneling method for size discrepancy, liberal use of an alternative artery to replace a pathologic HA, and reconstruction of a second HA for grafts with dual hepatic arteries in the graft. Results: Difficult HARs were small HA (21.35%), size discrepancy (12.57%), multiple hepatic arteries (11.28%), suboptimal quality (31.1%), intimal dissection (20.5%), and immediate redo (5.18%). The overall hepatic artery thrombosis (HAT) rate was 3.04% in this series. The average HAT rate during the last 4 years (2017–2020) was 1.46% (6/408), which was significantly lower than the average HAT rate from 2008 to 2016 (39/1040, 3.8%) with a statistical significance (p = 0.025). Treatment for posttransplant HAT included anastomosis after trim back (9), reconstruction using alternatives (19), and nonsurgical treatment with urokinase (9). Conclusion: Careful examination of the HA under surgical microscope and selection of the appropriate recipient HA are key to successful reconstruction. Through continual technical refinements, we can reduce HA complications to the lowest degree.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106776
JournalInternational Journal of Surgery
Volume104
DOIs
StatePublished - 08 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors

Keywords

  • Hepatic artery
  • Hepatic artery reconstruction
  • Hepatic artery thrombosis
  • Living donor liver transplantation

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