Fa. Casavilla et al., CLINICAL OUTCOME OF PATIENTS INFECTED WITH HEPATITIS-C VIRUS-INFECTION ON SURVIVAL AFTER PRIMARY LIVER-TRANSPLANTATION UNDER TACROLIMUS, Liver transplantation and surgery, 4(6), 1998, pp. 448-454
The outcome of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection on patient and graft
survival after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) has been controv
ersial. An earlier experience with a higher dose of tacrolimus (greate
r than or equal to 0.1 mg/kg/d intravenously and greater than or equal
to 0.2 mg/kg/d orally) was associated with a worse clinical outcome i
n patients infected with HCV. The clinical outcome of 183 liver transp
lant recipients with end-stage river disease (ESLD) secondary to HCV i
nfection (HCV group) was compared with a contemporary cohort of 556 pa
tients with HCV infection who underwent transplantation for nonviral,
nonmalignant ESLD (control group). Art patients were prospectively scr
eened for anti-HCV antibodies and HCV RNA by reverse-transcriptase pol
ymerase chain reaction. All OLT patients were receiving low-dose tacro
limus immunosuppression. Cumulative patient survival rates for the HCV
group were 80% after 1 year and 75% after 3 years compared with rates
of 84% and 78%, respectively, in the control group (P = .452), Primar
y graft survival rates at the same time intervals for the HCV group an
d the control group were 72% and 77.5% at 1 year and 67% and 72% at 3
years, respectively (P = .144), The incidence of re-transplantation (r
e-OLT) in the HCV group and the control group was 12.6% and 10.4%, res
pectively (P = .42), Chronic HCV infection as an indication for OLT wi
th a lower dose of tacrolimus immunosuppression (less than or equal to
0.05 mg/kg/d intravenously and less than or equal to 0.1 mg/kg/d oral
ly) is associated with a similar patient and graft survival as those w
ithout HCV infection. (C) 1998 by the American Association for the Stu
dy of Liver Diseases.