Background. Biliary atresia can be treated by portoenterostomy, which
is primarily palliative, or by liver transplantation, which is primari
ly curative. The purpose of this study was to determine the long-term
outcome of liver transplantation for the treatment of biliary atresia.
Methods. During an 8-year period, 45 patients who underwent liver tra
nsplantation for biliary atresia and 10 patients who were referred to
our center for portoenterostomy were retrospectively analyzed. Results
. No patient with biliary atresia died awaiting liver transplantation.
The waiting time for all patients was 36.7 +/- 42.8 days. Thirty-four
patients (75.6%) required one transplant, whereas 11 patients (24.4%)
required 17 retransplants. Twenty-two patients (48.9%) required 39 re
operations (1.8 per patient). There were 4.9 infectious episodes, 2.2
rejection episodes, and 4.4 readmissions per patient. However, 91% of
reoperations, 80% of infections, and 78% of rejections occurred within
6 months of transplantation. The overall 7-year actuarial patient and
graft survival for patients with biliary atresia was 86.2% and 62.7%,
respectively. Conclusions. Our results indicate that long-term patien
t survival after liver transplantation for biliary atresia is excellen
t. However, portoenterostomy continues to have an initial complementar
y but limited long-term role in the treatment of infants with biliary
atresia.