Background: Acute renal failure (ARF) in critically ill patients is associated with a high mortality rate. Continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) is now widely used for the treatment of ARF in these critically ill patients. We retrospectively analyzed the role of CRRT as a prognostic parameter in patients receiving a cadaveric liver graft in 1998.
Methods: We reviewed the patient records of all adult recipients of a cadaveric liver graft (N = 54) in 1998 and compared those who underwent CRRT treatment (N = 19) to those without CRRT treatment (N = 35).
Results: Mortality was high in the continuous venovenous hemodialysis (CVVHD) group (58%). At the time of transplantation, creatinine (1.7+/-0.4 vs. 1.0+/-0.1 mg/dl), blood urea nitrogen (40+/-13 vs. 22+/-3 mg/dl), aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT; 585+/-420 vs. 242+/-97 U/liter), and bilirubin (11.6+/-4.1 vs. 6.5+/-1.9 mg/dl) were higher in the CVVHD group than in controls, whereas hemoglobin (10.3+/-0.6 vs. 10.8+/-0.4 g/dl), white blood cells (6.3+/-0.6 vs. 7.0+/-0.8/nl), and thrombocytes (110+/-18 vs. 90+/-10/nl) were similar. After transplantation, liver graft function was impaired in the CVVHD group as compared with controls.
Conclusions: The necessity for CRRT in patients after liver transplantation correlates with a high risk of death. Thus, more efforts have to be made to prevent renal failure in patients after liver transplantation.