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Adult-to-Adult Living Donor Liver Transplantation Study

Completed
Conditions
Cirrhosis
Hepatitis C
Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Registration Number
NCT00096733
Lead Sponsor
Arbor Research Collaborative for Health
Brief Summary

There are two principal purposes of this study: 1) to determine whether it is more beneficial for a liver transplant recipient candidate to pursue a living donor liver transplant (LDLT) or wait for a deceased donor liver transplant (DDLT), and 2) to study the impact of liver donation on the donor's health and quality of life.

Detailed Description

Adult to adult living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is a relatively new procedure increasingly used at major transplantation centers. Relatively small numbers of cases are performed at any one center and approaches to the patient and donor are too diverse across centers to provide reliable and generalizable information on donor and recipient outcomes from individual centers. Therefore, a network of nine leading liver transplantation centers and a data coordination center (DCC) has been organized to accrue and follow sufficient numbers of patients being considered for and undergoing LDLT to provide generalizable results from adequately powered studies. This network has established the Adult to Adult Living Donor Liver Transplantation Cohort Study (A2ALL) that will conduct both retrospective and prospective studies of LDLT.

The primary study objective is to analyze the effect of choosing to pursue living liver donation. The principal hypothesis is that pursuit of a living liver allograft leads to decreased pre-transplant morbidity and mortality and better long term outcomes for patients starting from the point at which listed patients have a potential donor evaluated (at least a history and physical examination). Emerging data suggest that LDLT provides an inferior graft because of reduced parenchymal mass and added technical complexity when compared to a whole liver used for DDLT. The magnitude of the disadvantage to the LDLT graft will be assessed by comparing results between LDLT and DDLT from the time of transplant. Finally, a careful and detailed series of studies of potential and actual living liver donors is included as a primary objective because of the tremendous importance of this issue to our understanding of the impact of the procedure.

Secondary objectives will address selected biological and clinical issues in transplantation structured around the comparison between DDLT and LDLT.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
2470
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Survival of the potential liver transplant recipientTime from living donor evaluation to death

Time from evaluation of a living liver donor until death of the potential recipient, to test the benefit of living liver donation.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Recipient survival from time of transplant (either living or deceased donor)From transplant until death or last follow-up

Recipient survival from transplant to death. The goal is to compare survival among living donor versus deceased donor recipients.

Trial Locations

Locations (9)

University of California Los Angeles

🇺🇸

Los Angeles, California, United States

University of California San Francisco

🇺🇸

San Francisco, California, United States

Northwestern University

🇺🇸

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Columbia University

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

University of Colorado Health System

🇺🇸

Denver, Colorado, United States

University of Virginia

🇺🇸

Charlottesville, Virginia, United States

University of North Carolina

🇺🇸

Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States

University of Pennsylvania

🇺🇸

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Virginia Commonwealth University

🇺🇸

Richmond, Virginia, United States

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