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Long-Term Outcome of Portal Vein Stent Placement in Pediatric Liver Transplant Recipients: A Comparison with Balloon Angioplasty.

PURPOSE: To evaluate the long-term efficacy of stent placement versus balloon angioplasty for portal vein (PV) stenosis in pediatric liver transplant (LT) recipients.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty patients (<18 years old; median, 14 months) who underwent percutaneous transhepatic balloon angioplasty (n = 12), transhepatic stent placement (n = 18), or intraoperative transmesenteric stent placement (n = 20) between 1994 and 2015 were retrospectively analyzed. The median intervals from LT to percutaneous transhepatic angioplasty, stent, and intraoperative stent were 145 days (range, 27-2072), 98 days (range, 5-2289), and 0 days (range, 0-14), respectively. The primary study endpoint was the primary patency of each group. Secondary study endpoints included procedural complications, functional stent stenosis, and stent fractures.

RESULTS: The median clinical follow-up periods were 81 months (range, 13-179), 118 months (range, 65-181), and 112 months (range, 47-168) in each group, respectively. In the angioplasty group, the 1-, 5-, and 10-year primary patency rates were all 75% ± 13%. The corresponding rates were all 100% in the percutaneous transhepatic stent group and 90% ± 7%, 90% ± 7%, and 85% ± 8%, respectively, in the intraoperative transmesenteric stent group (P = .103). Major procedural complications occurred in 4 patients, including 1 case with PV tear after percutaneous transhepatic post-stent angioplasty, and 3 cases with acute PV thrombosis after intraoperative transmesenteric stent. Functional stent stenosis and stent fractures occurred in 1 and 2 patients, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: No statistically significant difference was observed between the 3 groups in terms of the long-term primary patency rates. Therefore, angioplasty should be considered first to treat PV stenosis in pediatric LT recipients.

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