Hospitalization patterns before and after liver transplantation.

2007 
Background. Mortality among patients with chronic liver failure is significantly reduced upon liver transplantation. However, decreases in mortality may not be accompanied by decreases in morbidity metrics, such as hospitalization rates. We compared pre- and posttransplant hospitalization rates for liver transplant recipients. Methods. Statewide hospitalization data were analyzed among 215 adult chronic liver failure patients in Pennsylvania who received a deceased donor transplant from September 2001 to December 2002. Generalized estimating equation (GEE) models were fitted to compare covariate-adjusted pre- and posttransplant hospital admission rates and mean length of stay per admission. The study minimized biases by calculating pre- and posttransplant morbidity in a cohort restricted to patients who received a transplant and were compared to themselves. Results. Liver transplant recipients experienced a significant 70% reduction in hospitalization rates (P<0.0001) posttransplant versus pretransplant. The decline, which occurred for all Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) subgroups, was significant for patients transplanted at all MELD scores except 6-9. However, even patients with MELD 6-9 experienced a significant decrease in mean length of stay, post versus pretransplant. Higher MELD scores at transplant were generally associated with a greater reduction in hospitalization rates. Also, patients transplanted with lower MELD scores appeared to receive lower quality livers. Conclusions. Our results indicate that the benefit of transplantation extends beyond patient survival and that an important reduction in hospitalization rates is experienced by transplanted patients. Further study is required to determine whether these results are generalizable to the entire United States and to evaluate the donor liver quality used for recipients of different MELD scores.
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