Risk factors for acute rejection in liver transplantation and its impact on the outcomes of recipients

JMJoseph Mugaanyi JTJingshu Tong CLChangjiang Lu SMShuqi Mao JHJing Huang CLCaide Lu
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trim.2022.101767
Transplant Immunology
Published on: December 2, 2022

Abstract

Objective: To determine the risk factors for acute rejection in liver transplantation and its impact on the outcomes of the recipients. Methods: Clinicopathological data of 290 patients who underwent liver transplantation from January 2012 to December 2021 at our center were retrospectively evaluated. Patients were grouped into an acute rejection (AR) group and a normal (NM) group based on the confirmed histopathological diagnosis of acute rejection. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression were used to determine the risk factors for acute rejection. Results: 244 patients were included in the study. Acute rejection occurred in 27 (11.1%) of the patients. Warm ischemia time (P = 0.137), cold ischemia time (P = 0.064) and chronic liver failure (P = 0.001) were potential risk factors for acute rejection. Chronic liver failure (P < 0.001, OR = 8.22, 95% CI = 2.47–27.32) was the independent risk factor. There was no significant difference in overall survival between recipients with acute rejection and those without it (P = 0.985). The 1-, 3- and 5-year overall survival in the NM group was 98.1%, 85.7% and 78.6% respectively vs 88.9%, 82.5% and 82.5% respectively in the AR group. Conclusion: Acute rejection does not appear to affect the long-term survival of the recipients. Only chronic liver failure was an independent risk factor for acute rejection. Our findings further illustrate that contradictions still exist on which factors influence acute rejection in liver transplant recipients.

Keywords
Liver transplantAcute rejectionRisk factorsChronic liver failure