Original Article
The Aggressive Phenotype Revisited: Utilization of Higher-Risk Liver Allografts

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Organ shortage has led to increased utilization of higher risk liver allografts. In kidneys, aggressive center-level use of one type of higher risk graft clustered with aggressive use of other types. In this study, we explored center-level behavior in liver utilization. We aggregated national liver transplant recipient data between 2005 and 2009 to the center-level, assigning each center an aggressiveness score based on relative utilization of higher risk livers. Aggressive centers had significantly more patients reaching high MELDs (RR 2.19, 2.33 and 2.28 for number of patients reaching MELD > 20, MELD > 25 and MELD > 30, p < 0.001), a higher organ shortage ratio (RR 1.51, 1.60 and 1.51 for number of patients reaching MELD > 20, MELD > 25 and MELD > 30 divided by number of organs recovered at the OPO, p < 0.04), and were clustered within various geographic regions, particularly regions 2, 3 and 9. Median MELD at transplant was similar between aggressive and nonaggressive centers, but average annual transplant volume was significantly higher at aggressive centers (RR 2.27, 95% CI 1.47–3.51, p < 0.001). In cluster analysis, there were no obvious phenotypic patterns among centers with intermediate levels of aggressiveness. In conclusion, highwaitlist disease severity, geographic differences in organ availability, and transplant volume are the main factors associated with the aggressive utilization of higher risk livers.

Key words:

Extended criteria donors
graft acceptance
liver transplantation
transplant centers

Abbreviations

AUC
area under the curve
BMI
body mass index
CF
clustering factor
CIT
cold ischemia time
CDC
centers for disease control
DCD
donation after cardiac death
GLM
generalized linear models
HBV
hepatitis B virus
HCV
hepatitis C virus
LFT
liver function tests
OPO
Organ Procurement Organization
PSR
program specific reports
SSDMF
Social Security Death Master File
SRTR
Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients
UNOS
United Network for Organ Sharing

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