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    Preoperative risk assessment in liver transplant (LT) candidates, particularly related to cardiac risk, is an area of intense interest for transplant clinicians. Various cardiac testing methods are employed by transplant centers to characterize cardiac risk. Serum troponin is an established method for the detection of myocardial injury in a wide variety of clinical settings. Preoperative troponin screening has been reported to predict postoperative cardiac events and mortality in various surgical patient populations, however, the utility of preoperative troponin to predict posttransplant outcomes in current LT candidate populations requires further investigation. We performed a prospective blinded study in a cohort of 275 consecutive LT recipients at a single transplant center to determine if preoperative serum troponin I (TnI) was predictive for postoperative 1-year mortality. Abnormal preoperative TnI levels (>.1 ng/mL) were found in 38 patients (14%). One-year mortality occurred in 19 patients (7%). There was no significant difference in mortality between patients with normal and abnormal troponin levels. Additionally, we found that there was no significant difference in early postoperative major adverse cardiac events between patient groups. Contrary to previous reports, elevated preoperative TnI was not significantly predictive of posttransplant mortality in LT recipients at our institution. © 2023 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Citation

    Christopher L Wray, Victor W Xia, Brent D Ershoff, Sherri Fields, Jennifer C Scovotti, Tristan Grogan, Henry M Honda, Fady M Kaldas. Utility of preoperative troponin I to predict mortality in adult liver transplant recipients: Revisiting pretransplant cardiac risk in the current MELD-allocation era. Clinical transplantation. 2024 Jan;38(1):e15191

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    PMID: 37965869

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