Gives Hope to Patients Waiting for a Liver Transplant


UNMC Surgeons Perform First Adult Living-Related Liver

Transplant in Nebraska

University of Nebraska Medical Center surgeons recently performed the

first adult-to-adult living donor liver transplant in Nebraska. The procedure

is a potentially a life-saving alternative to patients on the national

United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) liver transplant waiting list.

On Feb. 28, Tim Seitz, a 33-year-old Westminster, Colo., man donated

a portion of his liver to his mother, Kathleen Seitz of Phillips, Neb.

The surgery was done in Nebraska Health Systems University Hospital, located

on the UNMC campus in Omaha.

Normally, patients with liver disease wait months to years for a cadaveric

liver to become available. If an organ does not become available in time,

the patient will die from progressive liver failure. In 1998, the number

of deaths in potential recipients on the liver transplant waiting list

in the United States reached an all time high of 1,319 an increase of nearly

20 percent over the previous year.

With a living donor, surgeons can choose the time of transplantation

so that the recipient is in optimal condition, said UNMC Transplant Surgeon

Debra Sudan, M.D.

Its amazing, Kathleen Seitz said. I gave him life, and now he has

given it back to me.

Kathleen had been on the waiting list since April 1999 as a status 2B,

which is the highest category of those not in critical condition. Kathleen

has primary biliary cirrhosis, a liver disorder that results in damage

to the liver and the bile ducts. Its cause is unknown.

Last year I was getting sicker and more tired and wondered how sick

I would get before I got the transplant, she said.

Her children told her about the possibility of a living donor. They

believed it was the right thing to do and approached UNMC physicians.

Physicians found that two of Kathleen and Tony Seitz four sons and

one of Kathleens sisters had matching blood types, which made them possible

donor candidates. Dr. Sudan determined that Tim was the best candidate

based on the size of his liver. She said the surgery was important for

many reasons.

Kathleens liver disease had advanced rapidly over the three to six

months prior to her transplant and she was expected to have an additional

waiting time of nine to 18 months, Dr. Sudan said. By performing a living

donor transplant Kathleen was spared from waiting for a cadaveric liver

and the inevitable further decline in her health during those months or

years while she waited.

About 200 to 300 living related liver transplant procedures have been

performed in adult recipients worldwide, she said. In the United States,

surgeons began trying the procedure about two years ago. Since the early

1990s about 3,000 transplants have been done worldwide where an adult

shares their liver with a child.

Many of the transplants have been done in Asia where culturally, and

in some cases legally, cadaveric organ transplantation was not an option.

Due to the availability of cadaveric liver transplantation, only about

70 living-donor operations on pediatric recipients have been performed

each year since UNOS began collecting data in 1990. UNMC surgeons have

performed approximately 45 of these procedures.

During the procedure, surgeons divided the right side of Tims liver

from the left while blood was flowing through both segments. Once the tissue

was divided, the vessels were clamped and the right side was removed and

placed on ice.


 


This is a large operation being performed on a person who does not

personally benefit in terms of his own health status, Dr. Sudan said.

That makes it a large burden for surgeons who must choose donors who have

a low risk of complications from the operation.

For Kathleen, the surgery lasted about six hours. Her liver was removed

completely, and Tims liver was put in place.

Were very thankful to Dr. Sudan and the team. After being with the

team, they inspired a lot of confidence in us. These people are some of

the best in the nation, said Tim, a lawyer from the Denver area who specializes

in international tax, merges and acquisitions. He and his wife, Jodi, have

four children. Tim is the oldest of Kathleens eight children, four sons

and four daughters.

The liver is an organ that regenerates itself and it grows back rapidly.

In a short period of time, anywhere from seven days to six weeks, the donor

and recipient livers will increase to approximately the full normal size

of the whole liver prior to surgery, Dr. Sudan said.

For the recipient the risks are not very different than transplantation

with a whole cadaveric liver, Dr. Sudan said. The availability of living

donors can increase the number of recipients who are able to be transplanted.

Hopefully we can offer it to other families, especially those whove waited

a long time on the list.

The introduction of living donor liver transplantation for adult recipients

is expected to have an even greater impact on liver transplantation than

in children. Children only make up five to 10 percent of the patients waiting

for transplant and more than 13,000 of the 14,722 individuals currently

on the waiting list are adults. The current number of recipients on the

waiting list is more than three times the total number of liver transplants

done in the United States last year.

UNMC is the only public academic health science center in the state.

Through its commitment to research, education, outreach and patient care,

UNMC has established itself as one of the countrys leading centers for

cancer research and treatment, solid organ transplantation and arthritis.

During the past year, nearly $31 million in research grants and contracts

were awarded to UNMC scientists, and UNMCs funding from the National Institutes

of Health increased by 28 percent, going from $16.2 million to $20.7 million.

UNMCs educational programs are responsible for training more health professionals

practicing in Nebraska than any other institution.