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Live donor liver transplants at The London Clinic – in light of recent media coverage

Thursday 27 August 2009

 

According to recent media reports (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/8177826.stm), an independent inquiry set up to investigate allegations that NHS organs were given ‘unfairly’ to patients from foreign countries, has resulted in the Government’s decision to ban all private transplants of organs from deceased donors in the UK. However, surgeons in the private healthcare sector will still be able to carry out procedures using organs from living donors, for example kidney and liver transplants.  

 

Professor Roger Williams, Professor of Hepatology at University College London and Joint Clinical Director of The London Clinic Liver Centre says: “With the long waiting lists for liver transplants in this country, it is only right that deceased organs donated in the UK go to its residents. The guidelines for carrying out live transplants on EU residents need to be examined as currently they are unclear. Also, there are no reciprocal arrangements with countries in the EU which allow a UK resident who is in need of a liver transplant to undergo treatment in one of the many centres in France, Germany or Italy, let alone further a field in the EU.”

 

Live donor transplant is one solution to current issues surrounding the donation of organs. Other issues include a significant shortfall in the number of organs donated to meet patient demand. “The number of cadaver organs available has fallen in recent years, with 40% of relatives refusing consent to the use of the organ”, continues Professor Roger Williams. “If we are to keep up with the numbers requiring a liver transplant, and sadly the number of patients who die on the waiting list is rising, we will, as a country, have to do much better where organ donation is concerned.”

 

The London Clinic does not practice any procedures involving organs donated after death, but its liver centre is one of just a handful of centres of excellence in the UK offering pioneering live donor transplants and providing the highest level of care for those patients.      

 

Unlike any other major solid organ in the human body, the liver’s unique ability to regenerate itself is the key to saving more lives among those in urgent need of a transplant.   As a result, it is now possible to ‘split’ the liver in two, taking either the right or left lobe from a ‘matching’ live adult donor and transplanting it into a patient in need.

 

Professor Williams continues, “Our view at The London Clinic Liver Centre is that live donor transplant is the solution for overseas patients wanting to come to the UK for liver transplantation. Despite the complexity of the procedure, the results are excellent and we ensure the highest level of care and safety for both the donor and recipient.”

 

Professor Rajiv Jalan, Head of the Liver Failure Group, University College London and Consultant Hepatologist at The London Clinic Liver Centre adds: “Live donor liver transplantation offers the only real curative option for patients with advanced liver disease for whom a cadaveric donor is not available due to organ shortages. In expert hands, the procedure is safe and has a very high success rate.”

 

Research suggests that survival rates for live donor transplants are approximately the same as those for whole organ donation, with 90% of patients surviving after the first year, and 70% still alive five to ten years later. 

 

The London Clinic’s Liver Transplant team includes the world-renowned surgeons Professor Max Malago, Joint Clinical Director, Mr Steven Olde Damink and Mr Charles Imber. They work closely with Professor Rajiv Jalan and Professor Roger Williams who are the Liver Transplant Hepatologists.

 

 

For more information about live donor liver transplants at The London Clinic or to speak to any of the consultants at the liver centre please contact The London Clinic Liver Centre on 020 7616 7719. For media enquires please contact The London Clinic Press Office on 020 8786 3860 or pressoffice@thelondonclinic.co.uk