Histological Assessment of the Bile Duct before Liver Transplantation: Does the Bile Duct Injury Score Predict Biliary Strictures?

Author:

Ly Mark12,Lau Ngee-Soon12ORCID,McKenzie Catriona23,Kench James G.23,Seyfi Doruk12,Majumdar Avik12,Liu Ken124,McCaughan Geoffrey124,Crawford Michael12,Pulitano Carlo12

Affiliation:

1. 9E Australian National Liver Transplantation Unit, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Missenden Rd., Camperdown, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia

2. Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia

3. Department of Tissue Pathology and Diagnostic Oncology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia

4. Centenary Institute, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia

Abstract

Introduction: Histological injury to the biliary tree during organ preservation leads to biliary strictures after liver transplantation. The Bile Duct Injury (BDI) score was developed to assess histological injury and identify the grafts most likely to develop biliary strictures. The BDI score evaluates the bile duct mural stroma, peribiliary vascular plexus (PVP) and deep peribiliary glands (DPGs), which were correlated with post-transplant biliary strictures. However, the BDI score has not been externally validated. The aim of this study was to verify whether the BDI score could predict biliary strictures at our transplant centre. Methods: Brain-dead donor liver grafts transplanted at a single institution from March 2015 to June 2016 were included in this analysis. Bile duct biopsies were collected immediately before transplantation and assessed for bile duct injury by two blinded pathologists. The primary outcome was the development of clinically significant biliary strictures within 24 months post-transplant. Results: Fifty-seven grafts were included in the study which included 16 biliary strictures (28%). Using the BDI score, mural stromal, PVP and DPG injury did not correlate with biliary strictures including Non-Anastomotic Strictures. Severe inflammation (>50 leucocytes per HPF) was the only histological feature inversely correlated with the primary outcome (absent in the biliary stricture group vs. 41% in the no-stricture group, p = 0.001). Conclusions: The current study highlights limitations of the histological assessment of bile duct injury. Although all grafts had bile duct injury, only inflammation was associated with biliary strictures. The BDI score was unable to predict post-transplant biliary strictures in our patient population.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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