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      Ex Situ Liver Machine Perfusion as an Emerging Graft Protective Strategy in Clinical Liver Transplantation: the Dawn of a New Era.

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          Abstract

          The disparity between the number of available donor livers and patients awaiting a liver transplant has led transplant centers to accept suboptimal livers. There has been no universally accepted tool to predict the posttransplant function of these organs to safely increase the donor pool, protect these livers against ischemia-reperfusion injury, or improve their quality before implantation. Ex situ liver machine preservation has emerged as a promising novel graft protective strategy in the field of liver transplantation, with remarkable ongoing research and evolving clinical trials within Europe and the United States. This technology has been shown to be safe and feasible in the clinical liver transplantation field, has shown to reduce liver ischemia-reperfusion injury, and has shown to decrease the graft discard rate compared with conventional static cold storage. This review focuses on the current status of ex situ machine preservation in clinical liver transplantation, describing the most important technical aspects with the emphasis on the findings of the most recent clinical studies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Transplantation
          Transplantation
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          1534-6080
          0041-1337
          October 2019
          : 103
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of General, Abdominal and Transplant Surgery, Ruprecht-Karls University, Heidelberg, Germany.
          [2 ] Department of Surgery, University of Tennessee Health System, Memphis, TN.
          Article
          10.1097/TP.0000000000002772
          31022148
          c3969779-4203-4632-8162-8d01744fa0a8
          History

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