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Liver transplantation (LT) is a life-saving procedure for patients with end-stage liver diseases. Although with continuous advancement in technology, it remains a high-risk operation. The goal of LT is not only ensure survival of the patients but also to restore them back to their pre-morbid state with a good quality of life. Neurological sequelae can have major impact on postoperative outcomes after LT and yet the reported literature is scarce. Studies from Western countries showed some evidence on the use of cerebral oximtery in cardiac surgery to prevent neurological mishaps. LT shares similar intra-operative fluctuation of the haemodynamices as in cardiac surgery, causing disturbances in regional cerebral oxygenation and theorectically cerebral oximetry should be of great value as well in LT surgery. Data from a large randomised controlled trial is lacking from the current literatures. We therefore propose a prospective randomized controlled trial on the use of this device in adult LT and see whether its use could reduce neurological mishaps.
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Liver Transplant Liver transplantation (LT) is a life-saving procedure for patients with end-stage liver disease. Despite continuous advancement in technology, it remains a high-risk operation. The building-up of an oxygen debt during LT can lead to an increased risk of poor postoperative outcomes (1, 2). Furthermore, patients with acute liver failure or end-stage liver disease are prone to hepatic encephalopathy, which can lead to disturbance of auto-regulation in the brain, which may eventually cause cerebral hypoxia and ischaemia. Irresversible metabolic disturbances can impair cerebral auto-regulation, causing poor neurological outcomes after LT (3). The prevalence of encephalopathy, delirium and stroke in transplant recipients is 12-40% (3). Hypotheses for these conditions include prolonged stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) (so-called "ICU psychosis"), the use of Tacrolimus (4), rapid correction of hyponatraemia (5) and impaired cerebral auto-regulation (3), but no definite conclusion can be made most of the time. Among these hypotheses, impairment of cerebral auto-regulation has never been documented in large clinical trials for Chinese patients in LT.
Cerebral oximetry (Near infra-red spectroscopy, NIRS) There is no "gold standard" for measuring cerebral auto-regulation. Monitoring of the brain oxygenation, such as direct tissue O2 tension and jugular bulb O2 saturation, has been used as a surrogate of auto-regulation but it is invasive. Transcranial laser Doppler (TCD) of the middle cerebral artery has been validated in healthy volunteers as well as real patients as a good measurement of cerebral blood flow (6, 7). Similarly, near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), a non-invasive and continuous method, can also monitor the regional cerebral oxygenation (rScO2) and is increasingly used in cardiac surgery. A previous report has validated the use of NIRS when compared to TCD, as the latter requires a trained technician to monitor and supervise. NIRS provides a timely, real-time, inexpensive, easily measurable alternative to TCD, and thus should have a great potential for clinical usage in LT. Similar to other non-invasive oximetry (e.g. pulse oximetry), measurement can be done through adhesive tapes over bilateral forehead and connected to the machine (INVOS™ 5100C Cerebral/Somatic Oximeter by Covidien). This system is the ONLY cerebral/somatic oximetry system with FDA cleared improved outcome claims (8). Plachky et al. showed that 50% of patients demonstrated a decline in cerebral oxygen saturation when clamping of the vessles during LT and it had positive correlation with the postoperative cerebral disrubances (9). Nonetheless, the clinical application for patients undergoing LT is scarce and its application is novel. The use of this technology may potenitally be limited by the presence of high levels of bilirubin acting as a chromophore interferring with its data acquistion. However, in a pilot study of 9 patients who underwent LT investigators using this technology were able to demonstrate that 3 out of 9 patients had either transient or persistent impaired auto regulation throughout the operation. This in turn was associated with higher Model of End-Stage Disease Score (MELD) >15 (p=0.015), more postoperative seizures and stroke (P<0.0001) (3). A recent systematic review (10) of 901 Caucasians from 24 publications showing a decrease in NIRS (>15% relative to baseline) could have impaired postoperative cognitive function (28 versus 26; MMSE) and reduced LOS (14 versus 23 days) in open surgery. In the field of LT, impaired cerebral autoregulation (25%), cerebral deoxygenation in the anhepatic phase (36%) and cerebral hyperoxygenation with reperfusion of the grafted liver (14%) were identified by NIRS and could lead to adverse neurological outcome such as seizures, transient hemiparesis and stroke. Nonetheless, no large prospective randomized trial and no Chinese cohort were included.
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158 participants in 2 patient groups
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Kenneth Chok, MBBS, MS, FRCS, FCSHK, FHKAM
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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