Mastering the narrative: Precision reporting of risk and outcomes in liver transplantation

Femke H.C. de Goeij, Chase J. Wehrle, Fariba Abassi, Sangeeta Satish, Mingyi Zhang, Rebecca Panconesi, Koji Hashimoto, Charles M. Miller, Wojciech G. Polak, Pierre Alain Clavien, Jeroen de Jonge, Andrea Schlegel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Liver transplantation is associated with a high risk of postoperative complications due to the complexity of the surgical procedure, recipient disease severity and the wide range of graft quality, which remains somewhat unpredictable. However, survival rates after transplantation continue to improve and the focus has thus turned to other clinically relevant endpoints including post-transplant complications, patient quality of life and costs. Procedures like liver transplantation offer the entire spectrum of post-surgical events, even in donor-recipient constellations deemed of low risk within recently defined benchmark criteria. The Clavien-Dindo classification and the CCI (comprehensive complication index) were established to assess postoperative morbidity and are widely utilised across surgical specialties. These scores depend on the number and grade of complications, which reflect the interventions required, and are frequently used to assess specific donor-recipient risk profiles and new approaches, such as machine perfusion. However, these scores are associated with inter-observer variability when used in practice, mainly due to the lack of uniform definitions. The concept of benchmarking was recently introduced in surgery and transplantation as a mechanism of standardising expected donor/recipient risk with outcomes within the first year after surgery. However, the management of complications differs significantly worldwide, as does the rating scale assigned to various complications. This may lead to inhomogeneous interpretation of study results, leading to difficulty in assessing the clinical effects of novel preservation technologies and other therapeutics in liver transplantation. This article critically discusses frequent challenges associated with risk and outcome assessment following liver transplantation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)729-743
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Hepatology
Volume82
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 16 Nov 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 European Association for the Study of the Liver

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