Liver Transplant Question

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  • #59051
    lgpjennings
    Spectator

    I did see this article but obviously my head was someone else. Thank you very much for posting. My mother had her surgery over two weeks ago and she is still in the hospital. She is still having a hard time keeping food down and hasn’t had a bowel movement since she has been there. Hopefully this happens soon so she can go home, recover, and then chemo. I just want this to go away.

    #59050
    Eli
    Spectator

    Hi Lisa,

    I’m not sure if you saw this article that Marion posted recently. It’s very easy to read.

    Curing cancer by replacing livers!
    http://www.ksat.com/news/Curing-cancer-by-replacing-livers/-/478452/9222812/-/gsrjbc/-/index.html

    Here’s what the doctor said about the selection criteria for a transplant:

    Quote:
    Q. What are the criteria for a patient who would be able to have the transplant?

    Dr. Sonnenday: Patients for whom we think liver transplantation can be a treatment for their bile duct cancer are subjected to two different levels of selection criteria. The first is about their cancer: is the cancer confined to the liver and the bile ducts itself? We do a series of tests to make sure that there’s no evidence of cancer elsewhere including the surrounding lymph nodes. The patient can’t have an appropriate surgical resection option. The reason that we exclude patients who have a resection option even though the outcomes could at least theoretically be as good or better with transplant is that we just don’t have enough transplanted organs available for all the people already who need one. To offer liver transplantation to people who have other treatment options at this point we don’t think it’s appropriate. So, appropriate patients have to have bile duct cancer confined to the liver and bile ducts and not have a surgical resection option.

    Then they have to be a transplant candidate by all the traditional criteria. They can’t have other medical conditions that would prevent them from getting the most appropriate outcomes after transplant. Patients with other cancers, or patients with advanced heart disease or lung disease — things that would make the recovery from transplant more difficult – are not candidates for liver transplantation. Those are the same criteria that we use for any of our patients who are being considered for liver transplant.

    I hope this information helps.

    Best wishes,
    Eli

    #6534
    lgpjennings
    Spectator

    Is it possible to have a liver transplant after the bile duct resection? Also, is there someone who can interpret a pathology report of a bile duct resection recently performed? Please excuse my igorance I am still new to this disease that my mother has and I am not use to this website yet. Thank you. Lisa

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