Full Library
Expanding the Donor Pool: First Use of Hepatitis B Virus Nat Positive Solid Organ Allografts Into Seronegative Recipients
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Delman, Aaron M. (Author)
- Turner, Kevin M. (Author)
- Safdar, Kamran (Author)
- Anwar, Nadeem (Author)
- Silski, Latifa S. (Author)
- Lee, Tiffany C. (Author)
- Luckett, Keith (Author)
- Cuffy, Madison C. (Author)
- Quillin, Ralph C. (Author)
- Schoech, Michael (Author)
- Kaiser, Tiffany E. (Author)
- Govil, Amit (Author)
- Bari, Khurram (Author)
- Shah, Shimul A. (Author)
Title
Expanding the Donor Pool: First Use of Hepatitis B Virus Nat Positive Solid Organ Allografts Into Seronegative Recipients
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to assess the 1-year safety and effectiveness of HBV Nucleic Acid Test positive (HBV NAT+) allografts in seronegative kidney transplant (KT) and liver transplant (LT) recipients.
SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Despite an ongoing organ shortage, the utilization of HBV NAT+ allografts into seronegative recipients has not been investigated.
METHODS: From January 2017 to October 2020, a prospective cohort study was conducted among consecutive KT and LT recipients at a single institution. Primary endpoints were post-transplant HBV viremia, graft and patient survival.
RESULTS: With median follow-up of 1-year, there were no HBV-related complications in the 89 HBV NAT+ recipients. Only 9 of 56 KTs (16.1%) and 9 of 33 LTs (27.3%) experienced post-transplant HBV viremia at a median of 185 (KT) and 269 (LT) days postoperatively. Overall, viremic episodes resolved to undetected HBV DNA after a median of 80 days of entecavir therapy in 16 of 18 recipients. Presently, 100% of KT recipients and 93.9% of LT recipients are HBV NAT- with median follow-up of 13 months, whereas 0 KT and 8 LT (24.2%) recipients are HBV surface antigen positive indicating chronic infection. KT and LT patient and allograft survival were not different between HBV NAT+ and HBV NAT- recipients (P > 0.05), whereas HBV NAT+ KT recipients had decreased waitlist time and pretransplant duration on dialysis (P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: This is the largest series describing the transplantation of HBV NAT+ kidney and liver allografts into HBV seronegative recipients without chronic HBV viremia or decreased 1-year patient and graft survival. Increasing the utilization of HBV NAT+ organs in nonviremic recipients can play a role in decreasing the national organ shortage.
Publication
Annals of Surgery
Date
2021-10-01
Volume
274
Issue
4
Pages
556-564
Journal Abbr
Ann Surg
ISSN
1528-1140
Short Title
Expanding the Donor Pool
Language
eng
Library Catalog
PubMed
Extra
PMID: 34506310
Citation
Delman, A. M., Turner, K. M., Safdar, K., Anwar, N., Silski, L. S., Lee, T. C., Luckett, K., Cuffy, M. C., Quillin, R. C., Schoech, M., Kaiser, T. E., Govil, A., Bari, K., & Shah, S. A. (2021). Expanding the Donor Pool: First Use of Hepatitis B Virus Nat Positive Solid Organ Allografts Into Seronegative Recipients. Annals of Surgery, 274(4), 556–564. https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000005071
ORGANISMS
Link to this record