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Acute Liver FailureHealth Professionals BlogLiver Transplantation

Paediatric acute liver failure: a multidisciplinary perspective on when a critically ill child is unsuitable for liver transplantation

Title: Paediatric acute liver failure: a multidisciplinary perspective on when a critically ill child is unsuitable for liver transplantation

Source: The Lancet. Child & Adolescent Health 2024, 8 (12): 921-932

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Date of publication: December 2024  

Publication type: Review article

Abstract: Paediatric acute liver failure is a devastating condition with high morbidity and mortality, which is challenging to manage for the hepatologist, intensivist, and associated specialists. Emergency liver transplantation is required for 10-20% of patients, but for 10% of critically ill children, liver transplantation is deemed unsuitable; the child might be too unwell, or the underlying cause might carry a poor prognosis. Other social, logistical, or ethical considerations are often relevant. Liver transplantation when a patient is too unwell creates perioperative risk to the child that could lead to morbidity, mortality, and potential graft wastage, which is detrimental for others on the waiting list. Donor liver scarcity should prompt an evaluation of whether a transplant is justified through a holistic multidisciplinary lens that considers medical, social, logistical, and ethical concerns. In this Review, we explore, from a multidisciplinary perspective, why a critically unwell child with paediatric acute liver failure might be unsuitable for liver transplantation.

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