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Liver disease and transplantation in telomere biology disorders: An international multicenter cohort

YunZu Michele Wang, Batul Kaj‐Carbaidwala, Adam Lane, Suneet Agarwal, Fabian Beier, Alison A. Bertuch, Kristin A. Borovsky, Steven K. Brennan, Rodrigo T. Calado, Luiz Fernando Bazzo Catto, Carlo Dufour, Christen L. Ebens, Francesca Fioredda, Neelam Giri, Nicholas J. Gloude, Frederick D. Goldman, Paula M. Hertel, Ryan Himes, Sioḃán Keel, Divya Koura, Christian P. Kratz, Sakil Kulkarni, Iris Liou, Taizo A. Nakano, Silvia Nastasio, Marena R. Niewisch, Daniel D. Penrice, Ghadir Sasa, Sharon A. Savage, Douglas A. Simonetto, David S. Ziegler, Alexander Miethke, Kasiani C. Myers

2024Hepatology Communications11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with telomere biology disorders (TBD) develop hepatic disease, including hepatitis, cirrhosis, and hepatopulmonary syndrome. No specific treatment exists for TBD-related liver disease, and the role of liver transplantation (LT) remains controversial. Our study objectives were to describe the clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes in patients with TBD-related liver disease, and their LT outcomes. METHODS: Data from 83 patients with TBD-associated liver disease were obtained from 17 participating centers in the Clinical Care Consortium of Telomere-Associated Ailments and by self-report for our retrospective, multicenter, international cohort study. RESULTS: Group A ("Advanced") included 40 patients with advanced liver disease. Of these, 20 underwent LT (Group AT). Group M ("Mild") included 43 patients not warranting LT evaluation, none of whom were felt to be medically unfit for liver transplantation. Supplemental oxygen requirement, pulmonary arteriovenous malformation, hepatopulmonary syndrome, and higher bilirubin and international normalized ratio values were associated with Group A. Other demographics, clinical manifestations, and laboratory findings were similar between groups. Six group A patients were declined for LT; 3 died on the waitlist. Median follow-up post-LT was 2.9 years (range 0.6-13.2 y). One-year survival post-LT was 73%. Median survival post-LT has not been reached. Group AT patients had improved survival by age compared to all nontransplant patients (log-rank test p = 0.02). Of 14 patients with pretransplant hypoxemia, 8 (57%) had improved oxygenation after transplant. CONCLUSIONS: LT recipients with TBD do not exhibit excessive posttransplant mortality, and LT improved respiratory status in 57%. A TBD diagnosis should not exclude LT consideration.

Topics & Concepts

Hepatopulmonary syndromeMedicineLiver transplantationInternal medicineLiver diseaseTransplantationCohortCirrhosisGastroenterologyHepatitis CModel for End-Stage Liver DiseaseRetrospective cohort studyTelomeres, Telomerase, and SenescenceNuclear Structure and FunctionRNA regulation and disease