Is Cardiac Surgery Safe in Patients with Previous Liver Transplantation? A Narrative Review
Abstract
Nael Al-Sarraf
Background Liver transplant patients have increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease and the outcome of these patients following cardiac surgery has been reported in small series of patients. The aim of this review was to examine and report safety outcomes of liver transplant patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
Methods Literature review was conducted using three databases from inception to June 2023. Multiple search terms were used and limited to English language. Nine relevant articles were included. Outcomes of interest were short-term mortality, long-term survival, liver graft failure, major morbidity and infection in liver transplant recipients undergoing cardiac surgery.
Results Cardiac risk factors (diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hyperlipidemia) were prevalent in liver transplant patients. 30-days mortality ranged across the studies from zero to 23.8%. 1-year survival ranged from 74-91% and 5-years survival ranged from 33-69%. Commonest causes of death were cardiac and sepsis. Predictors of mortality were preoperative encephalopathy, pulmonary hypertension, blood transfusion and postoperative increase in creatinine and bilirubin levels. Liver allograft rejection ranged from zero to 4.7% with no predictors reported. Liver dysfunction was seen in 33-46% of patients, and all were transient with recovery at the time of hospital discharge. Major morbidities were commonly reported and included respiratory and renal failure. Infection rates ranged from zero to 38% and the most common reported sites were pneumonia, sepsis, and surgical site infections.
Conclusion Cardiac surgery can be performed in liver transplant patients with good short- and long-term results and acceptable morbidities.