TY - JOUR
T1 - Imaging of Ischemic Cholangiopathy Following Donation after Circulatory Death Liver Transplant
AU - Zulfiqar, Maria
AU - Sugi, Mark
AU - Venkatesh, Sudhakar K.
AU - Loh, Jiezhen Tracy
AU - Ludwig, Daniel
AU - Ballard, David H.
AU - Jayasekera, Channa
AU - Pannala, Rahul
AU - Aqel, Bashar
AU - Yano, Motoyo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Radiological Society of North America Inc.. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Ischemic cholangiopathy (IC) is the leading cause of inferior long-term outcomes following donation after circulatory death (DCD) liver transplant. Biliary strictures related to IC are nonanastomotic strictures (NASs) by definition and involve the donor hepatic ducts proximal to the anastomosis, compared with postsurgical anastomotic strictures that form due to fibrotic healing. IC-related NASs can be microangiopathic with patent hepatic artery or macroangiopathic with occluded or stenotic hepatic artery. Recently, IC with NASs have been described to have four distinct patterns at imaging: diffuse necrosis, multifocal progressive, confluence dominant, and minor form, which correlate clinically with graft prognosis. Severe IC can lead to ductal wall breakdown with subsequent bile leaks that can cause significant patient morbidity, with imaging playing a vital role in diagnosis and guiding intervention. IC also predisposes the transplanted liver to biliary stasis and subsequent formation of stones, casts, and sludge. Some cases of posttransplant biliary stricturing are not IC but are a sequela of reflux cholangitis seen with choledochojejunal anastomosis. Other biliary findings in the posttransplant liver can be explained by sphincter of Oddi dysfunction that results from denervation. The authors describe and comprehensively categorize the various IC types and their imaging patterns at MRI and MR cholangiopancreatography, review the prognostic significance of these imaging patterns, and discuss imaging features of additional biliary complications associated with IC after DCD liver transplant.
AB - Ischemic cholangiopathy (IC) is the leading cause of inferior long-term outcomes following donation after circulatory death (DCD) liver transplant. Biliary strictures related to IC are nonanastomotic strictures (NASs) by definition and involve the donor hepatic ducts proximal to the anastomosis, compared with postsurgical anastomotic strictures that form due to fibrotic healing. IC-related NASs can be microangiopathic with patent hepatic artery or macroangiopathic with occluded or stenotic hepatic artery. Recently, IC with NASs have been described to have four distinct patterns at imaging: diffuse necrosis, multifocal progressive, confluence dominant, and minor form, which correlate clinically with graft prognosis. Severe IC can lead to ductal wall breakdown with subsequent bile leaks that can cause significant patient morbidity, with imaging playing a vital role in diagnosis and guiding intervention. IC also predisposes the transplanted liver to biliary stasis and subsequent formation of stones, casts, and sludge. Some cases of posttransplant biliary stricturing are not IC but are a sequela of reflux cholangitis seen with choledochojejunal anastomosis. Other biliary findings in the posttransplant liver can be explained by sphincter of Oddi dysfunction that results from denervation. The authors describe and comprehensively categorize the various IC types and their imaging patterns at MRI and MR cholangiopancreatography, review the prognostic significance of these imaging patterns, and discuss imaging features of additional biliary complications associated with IC after DCD liver transplant.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205606037&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1148/rg.240031
DO - 10.1148/rg.240031
M3 - Article
C2 - 39361529
AN - SCOPUS:85205606037
SN - 0271-5333
VL - 44
JO - Radiographics
JF - Radiographics
IS - 11
M1 - e240031
ER -