Purpose: The aim of our study was to evaluate the radiologist's role in managing paediatric orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) through a retrospective review of our experience in diagnosing and treating post-OLT complications.
Materials and methods: Forty children (mean age 4.6 years) underwent 44 OLTs over 71 months. The follow-up period (mean 724 days) was divided into three phases: hospital stay, up to three months after discharge and subsequent period. The number and type of radiological examinations, radiologically detectable complications and interventional procedures were analysed.
Results: Most examinations were carried out with ultrasound (US) (859/931 of all radiological studies performed during the first two phases, 92.3%). Colour-Doppler US enabled early detection and treatment of all vascular complications (9/40, 22.5% of patients; 13 complications in nine patients, eight arterial and five portal complications; 1.4 for each patient with complications). Computed tomography (CT) or angiography was very rarely employed. US also detected biliary complications (11 patients, 27.5%: three cases of segmental ducts excluded from the anastomosis, four cases of stenosis of the biliodigestive anastomosis, one lithiasis, three stenoses associated with lithiasis), which were successfully managed in 75% of the cases treated with interventional radiology procedures (percutaneous bilioplasty and/or lithotripsy). At the time of writing this paper, the patient survival rate was 100%, and the organ survival rate was 91% (40/44). There were four re-transplantations: three due to hepatic artery thrombosis and one to biliary stenosis with lithiasis.
Conclusions: The radiologist's role is fundamental for early sonographic diagnosis of post-OLT complications in children. Vascular complications are often associated in a single patient, and early treatment may improve the prognosis. Interventional radiology represents a safe and effective treatment for many biliary complications.