Background: Intrapulmonary shunt (IPS) is recognized in 10% of chronic liver disease patients. Liver transplantation (LT) is associated with a high risk of morbidity and mortality in patients with IPS.
Patients and methods: Of 519 pediatric LT cases between November 2005 and October 2018, 50 patients with IPS were enrolled in this study. The patients were divided into 3 groups, according to the shunt ratio, calculated by scintigraphy: mild (15%-20%, n = 26), moderate (20%-40%, n = 19), and severe (> 40%, n = 5). We compared the patients' characteristics before LT and the outcomes of LT between these groups.
Results: The major original disease resulting in LT in the mild and moderate groups was biliary atresia (73.1% and 52.6%, respectively), while that in the severe group was congenital portosystemic shunt (60%). The median ages at LT were 7.5, 6.1, and 8.3 years in the mild, moderate, and severe groups, respectively. All of the mild and moderate IPS patients lived; however, 3 patients with severe IPS (60.0%) died within 3 months. The shunt ratios of the mild and moderate IPS patients normalized within 2 years after LT, while the 2 surviving severe IPS patients showed a slight improvement. The autopsy findings of the lung in 1 deceased severe IPS patient showed medial hypertrophy and proliferation of intimal cells of the pulmonary arteries, suggesting a diagnosis of portopulmonary hypertension.
Conclusions: LT can be safely performed for mild and moderate IPS patients; however, LT for severe IPS patients should be carefully indicated because concomitant portopulmonary hypertension may be masked by IPS.
Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.