Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
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Under FK 506-based immunosuppression, the entire cadaver small bowel except for a few proximal and distal centimeters was translated to 17 randomly matched patients, of whom two had antigraft cytotoxic antibodies (positive cross-match). Eight patients received the intestine only, eight had intestine in continuity with the liver, and one received a full multivisceral graft that included the liver, stomach, and pancreas. One liver-intestine recipient died after an intestinal anastomotic leak, sepsis, and graft-versus-host disease. The other 16 patients are alive after 1 to 23 months, in one case after chronic rejection, graft removal, and retransplantation. Twelve of the patients have been liberated from total parenteral nutrition, including all whose transplantation was 2 months or longer ago. The grafts have supported good nutrition, and in children, have allowed growth and weight gain. Management of these patients has been difficult and often complicated, but the end result has been satisfactory in most cases, justifying further clinical trials. The convalescence of the eight patients receiving intestine only has been faster and more trouble free than after liver-intestine or multivisceral transplantation, with no greater difficulty in the control of rejection.
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PMID:Intestinal transplantation in composite visceral grafts or alone. 138 43

Multivisceral transplantation, combined liver-intestine transplantation, and isolated small bowel transplantation are very similar procedures that were first developed in the 1950s. If the viscera can be conceptualized as a cluster of grapes hanging from its arterial stems, the three procedures are characterized by virtually identical vascular anastomoses, with exclusion or inclusion of as many viscera (grapes) as necessary; however, these procedures languished for nearly four decades because of the imperfect immunosuppressive regimens of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Finally, after the development of FK506, pediatric patients may undergo intestinal transplantation with the hope for long-term survival. These procedures are reserved for TPN-dependent children with permanent intestinal insufficiency. Candidacy for transplantation is also predicated on development of potentially fatal TPN complications such as cholestasis, recurrent sepsis, or thrombosis of access sites. Since 1990, 32 pediatric patients have undergone intestinal transplantation at the University of Pittsburgh, with an overall survival of 65%. Immunosuppression has been accomplished with a combination of corticosteroids, FK506, and prostaglandin E1. Although GVHD has not been a major problem, most patients have experienced rejection episodes requiring intensification of immunosuppression with a steroid bolus, a steroid recycle, an increase in FK506 dosage, or addition of OKT3. CMV has caused little morbidity, but EBV-related PTLD has affected 20% of all patients. It has not been possible to discontinue immunosuppression in the face of PTLD without engendering severe small intestinal rejection. Other problems have included recurrent sepsis, intestinal dysmotility, and persistent food avoidance. Future therapeutic trends are likely to include the performance of combined bone marrow-visceral transplant to induce a chimeric tolerogenic state and to lessen the need for long-term immunosuppression.
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PMID:Small bowel transplantation in infants and children. 769 29

Significantly reduced morbidity and mortality is needed before intestinal transplantation will be applicable in most patients with intestinal failure who are on long-term total parenteral nutrition (TPN). However, transplantation does play a role if TPN fails, with failure defined by Medicare as liver failure, frequent line sepsis, major central vein thrombosis, or recurrent dehydration. Of these complications, the relationship between liver failure and subsequent death in high-risk subgroups of long-term TPN patients has been shown clearly. Patients with less than 100 cm of postduodenal small bowel, an end-jejunostomy, no ileocecal valve or cecum, or persistently elevated liver function levels are at high risk for end-stage liver disease (ESLD). Early referral to experienced centers is suggested in these circumstances. High-risk patients may also take part in clinical trials of promising therapies to increase intestinal adaptation and prevent liver failure. Living donors should be considered for transplant candidates to minimize waiting time and optimize HLA matching. ESLD patients need a liver-intestine transplant. Because their waiting-list mortality is very high, their status on the liver waiting list should be elevated if possible. High incidence of early death from sepsis is reported after intestinal transplant, even at experienced centers. Aggressive measures should be taken if uncontrolled sepsis occurs, including discontinuing immunosuppression and removing the graft. Further research is needed in intestinal immunology and in development of strategies to decrease the need for aggressive immunosuppression in these transplant recipients. The ultimate role of intestinal transplantation will be determined by its capacity to show superiority, both in effectiveness and safety, to long-term TPN.
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PMID:The role of intestinal transplantation in the management of intestinal failure. 1147 3

1. Patients listed for combined liver and intestine transplantation have the highest waitlist mortality of any transplant candidates. 2. Liver-intestine candidates have higher mortality rates than other patients listed for liver transplantation at all model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) and pediatric end-stage liver disease (PELD) scores, sepsis rather than liver failure being the major cause of death in this group. 3. Increasing PELD scores appear to correlate with increasing waitlist mortality in patients awaiting combined liver and intestinal transplantation. 4. Present policy to increase MELD / PELD scores for liver-intestine patients by an additional estimated 10% mortality risk is an attempt to bridge the difference in waitlist mortality while maintaining the principle of allocating organs on the basis of disease severity. 5. Scheduled reevaluation of present allocation practices is essential to refine Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network United Network for Organ Sharing policy as it relates to patients in need of combined liver and intestinal transplantation.
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PMID:Organ allocation for liver-intestine candidates. 1538 23

Intestinal failure is a condition requiring the use of parenteral nutrition as long as it persists. Causes of severe protracted intestinal failure include short bowel syndrome, congenital diseases of enterocyte development, and severe motility disorders (total or subtotal aganglionosis or chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction syndrome). Intestinal failure may be irreversible in some patients, thus requiring permanent parenteral nutrition. Liver disease may develop with subsequent end-stage liver cirrhosis in patients with intestinal failure as a consequence of both underlying digestive disease and unadapted parenteral nutrition. Death will occur if combined liver-intestine transplantation is not performed. Catheter-related sepsis and/or extensive vascular thrombosis may impede the continuation of a safe and efficient parenteral nutrition and may also require intestinal transplantation in some selected cases. Thus management of patients with intestinal failure requires an early recognition of the condition and the analysis of its risk of irreversibility. Timing of referral for intestinal transplantation remains a crucial issue. As a consequence, management should include therapies adapted to each stage of intestinal failure based on a multidisciplinary approach in centers involving pediatric gastroenterology, parenteral nutrition expertise, home parenteral nutrition program, pediatric surgery, and liver intestinal transplantation program.
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PMID:Causes and management of intestinal failure in children. 1647 69

Irreversible intestinal failure in children is predominantly caused by surgical conditions such as volvulus, necrotizing enterocolitis, and gastroschisis. Functional intestinal failure from motility disorders such as intestinal pseudo-obstruction or enterocyte dysfunction with microvillus inclusion disease also may require intestine replacement. Approved indications for intestinal transplantation include liver dysfunction, loss of major venous access, frequent central line-related sepsis, and recurrent episodes of severe dehydration despite intravenous fluid management. Surgical options include transplantation of the isolated intestine, combined liver-intestine transplantation, or multivisceral transplantation of the stomach, duodenum, pancreas, and small bowel (with or without the liver). Immunosuppression for intestinal transplantation is based on tacrolimus therapy, often with induction immunosuppression using antilymphocyte antibodies (eg, antithymocyte antibody and alemtuzumab). Experience at centers of excellence demonstrates 1- and 5-year patient survival rates of 95% and 77%, respectively, with ongoing investigations focusing on lowering long-term causes of graft loss such as chronic rejection.
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PMID:Current perspectives on pediatric intestinal transplantation. 1946 23