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CITATION:
Mazariegos GV, Steffick DE , Horslen S, Farmer D, Fryer J, Grant D, Langnas A, Magee JC. Intestine transplantation in the United States, 1999-2008. Am J Transplant 2010; 10 (4 part 2): 1020-1034
ABSTRACT:
Improving short-term results with intestine transplantation
have allowed more patients to benefit with
nearly 700 patients alive in the United States with a
functioning allograft at the end of 2007. This success
has led to an increase in demand. Time to transplant
and waiting list mortality have significantly improved
over the decade, but mortality remains high, especially
for infants and adults with concomitant liver failure.
The approximately 200 intestines recovered annually
from deceased donors represent less than 3%
of donors who have at least one organ recovered.
Consent practice varies widely by OPTN region.
Opportunities for improving intestine recovery and
utilization include improving consent rates and standardizing
donor selection criteria. One-year patient and
intestine graft survival is 89% and 79% for intestineonly
recipients and 72% and 69% for liver-intestine recipients,
respectively. By 10 years, patient and intestine
survival falls to 46% and 29% for intestine-only recipients,
and 42% and 39% for liver-intestine, respectively.
Immunosuppression practice employs peri-operative
antibody induction therapy in 60% of cases; acute rejection
is reported in 30%–40% of recipients at one year.
Data on long-term nutritional outcomes and morbidities
are limited, while the cause and therapy for late
graft loss from chronic rejection are areas of ongoing
investigation.
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