Unification venoplasty to cope with recipient portal vein anomaly during living donor liver transplantation

Transplant Proc. 2013 Oct;45(8):3000-4. doi: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2013.08.073.

Abstract

Purpose: To cope with recipient portal vein (PV) anomalies, such as early branching of the right posterior section (RPS), during living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) surgery, we performed a simulation study to standardize the surgical technique for unification portal venoplasty.

Methods: This study included an observational analysis of conventional methods utilizing RPS PV, simulation-based design of a new surgical technique, and clinical application of this new technique.

Results: In a case encountering RPS PV, a mild anastomotic PV stenosis was persistent over 6 months postsurgery, indicating the need for technical refinement. After computational simulation analysis, we found that simple suturing of the PV branch patch automatically resulted in a funnel-shaped elongation. A prospective recipient study (n = 30) indicated that usual PV reconstruction via the PV bifurcation method is feasible in the absence of unusual donor or recipient PV anomaly. Retrospective living donor PV anatomy analysis (n = 20) revealed that 20-mm-long limbs of the first-order PV branches are necessary to make a 10- to l5-mm-long funneled PV stump. This technique of unification venoplasty for an anomalous recipient PV was applied to an adult patient undergoing LDLT with a right liver graft, for which it was shown to be technically feasible and effective.

Conclusions: A simplified unification venoplasty technique was developed to cope with a recipient PV anomaly in adult LDLT.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Liver Transplantation*
  • Living Donors*
  • Portal Vein / abnormalities*
  • Portal Vein / surgery