Hemodynamic and Clinical Response to Liver Transplantation in Children and Young Adults POPH Patients

Shiro Baba, Eri Ogawa, Kentaro Akagi, Koichi Matsuda, Takuya Hirata, Tatsuya Okamoto, Hideaki Okajima, Junko Takita
Kyoto University
Japan

Pediatric Cardiology
Pediatr Cardiol 2023;
DOI: 10.1007/s00246-023-03121-0

Abstract
Portopulmonary hypertension is an intractable form of pulmonary hypertension. Although liver transplantation is recommended for patients who respond poorly to treatments, the mechanisms by which liver transplantation improves pulmonary hypertension remain unclear. The present study investigated these mechanisms by retrospectively evaluating patients’ data. This study retrospectively evaluated echocardiography and catheterization data before and after liver transplantation in 12 patients who underwent liver transplantation from 2001 to 2019. The 12 patients included one male and 11 females, of median age at liver transplantation of 10 years, 2 months. Nine patients underwent liver transplantation for congenital biliary atresia and three for portal vein aplasia or hypoplasia. Mean pulmonary arterial pressure was 44.1 ± 8.1 mmHg at the first cardiac catheter examination, 35.3 ± 7.8 mmHg before liver transplantation, and 29.5 ± 9.3 mmHg 6 months after liver transplantation. Pulmonary artery pressure was reduced by treatments of pulmonary hypertension and by liver transplantation. Pulmonary vascular resistance did not differ before and after liver transplantation, whereas the cardiac index decreased significantly, indicating that the significant reduction in mean pulmonary artery pressure was due to a decrease in cardiac index. Decreased cardiac index was thought to result from improvements in hyperdynamic conditions due to increased (normalized) systemic vascular resistance. Liver transplantation likely suppresses shear stress on pulmonary arteries, preventing further damage by hyper-circulation. A longer-term evaluation is required to determine the effect of improving pulmonary artery remodeling.

Category
Class I. Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Liver Disease
Diagnostic Testing for Pulmonary Vascular Disease. Invasive Testing

Age Focus: Pediatric Pulmonary Vascular Disease and Adult Pulmonary Vascular Disease

Fresh or Filed Publication: Filed (PHiled). Greater than 1-2 years since publication

Article Access
Free PDF File or Full Text Article Available Through PubMed or DOI: No

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