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Copyright ©The Author(s) 2020.
World J Hepatol. Dec 27, 2020; 12(12): 1168-1181
Published online Dec 27, 2020. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v12.i12.1168
Table 1 Approach to metabolic associated fatty liver disease in the transplant candidate
Management stage
Challenges
Considerations
Approach
Pre-transplantCardiovascular disease Most common cause of death in MAFLD patients; Older patients with multiple comorbidities driving cardiovascular risk, disease may be subclinical; Pharmacologic optimisation of risk factors can be limited by liver dysfunction e.g., statins, beta blockade, anti-platelets agentsRigorous pre-transplant assessment including stress echocardiography and coronary angiography in high risk patients; Risk factor modification as per general population
T2DMPre-LT diabetes associated with reduced survival post-LT; Poor glycemic control immediately pre-LT and peri- LT increases surgical complications Tight glycemic control during waitlist period and peri-operative; Multidisciplinary approach to diabetic management
Renal dysfunction Multifactorial in MAFLD, with hypertension and T2DM; Even mild disease at time of LT associated with higher risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality Prevent even small deterioration in renal function prior to LT; Consider simultaneous liver kidney transplant where indicated
Nutrition Pre-LT nutrition has major influence on post-LT morbidity, mortality and hospital stay; Assessment is difficult in obese patients and those with ascites; Sarcopenic obesity and myosteatosis are common. Risk factors for long term mortality Specialist nutritional consultation prior to transplant with assessment for sarcopenia; High energy, high protein diet with enteral feeding if required
Peri-operative Obesity More common in MAFLD than other etiologies; Peri-operative challenges e.g., surgical technique, wound infection and dehiscence, biliary complications; Balancing healthy weight loss in pre-LT period with muscle loss and sarcopenia; Exercise often limited by frailty and possible transient increases in portal pressure with excessive strain Controlled weight loss in pre-LT period ensuring protein requirements met. Very low-calorie diets not recommendedBariatric surgery pre-LT or simultaneously with LT in highly selected patients. Sleeve gastrectomy preferred over laparoscopic banding or gastric bypass
Donor steatosisDonor steatosis > 30% is a risk factor for primary graft non-function and graft loss; Balancing risk of complications with steatotic donors against organ availability and demandAssessment of hepatic steatosis at all stages of organ procurement; Future possibilities with machine perfusion and liver reconditioning
Cardiovascular risk NASH patients more likely to have cardiovascular events in the post-operative periodCareful pre-operative assessment to predict risk; Close perioperative monitoring
Post-transplantRecurrent MAFLDDue to non-dynamic genetic, metabolic and behavioural factors, 50% of MAFLD transplant recipients have recurrent MAFLD post-LTChoice of less diabetogenic immunosuppression regimen e.g., steroid free protocols, CNI sparing; Lifestyle and behavioural modification and traditional risk factor modifications e.g., hyperlipidemia, hypertension as per general population
De novo MAFLDContributors to new MAFLD post-LT include diabetogenic medications e.g., CNI, steroids, obesity related to steroids, inactivity and return of appetiteAs above