Translational medical research and liver transplantation: systematic review
Review Article

Translational medical research and liver transplantation: systematic review

Lucas Souto Nacif, Vera Kim, Flavio Galvão, Suzane Kioko Ono, Rafael Soares Pinheiro, Flair José Carrilho, Luiz Carneiro D’Albuquerque

Disciplina de Transplante de Figado e Orgaos do Aparelho Digestivo, Departamento de Gastroenterologia, Hospital das Clinicas HCFMUSP, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Sao Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

Contributions: (I) Conception and design: All authors; (II) Administrative support: None; (III) Provision of study materials or patients: None; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: LS Nacif, V Kim, F Galvão, RS Pinheiro, SK Ono; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: All authors; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of manuscript: All authors.

Correspondence to: Lucas Souto Nacif, MD, MSc, PhD. Rua Dr. Enéas de Carvalho Aguiar, 255-9o andar, sala 9113/9114 CEP 05403-900, São Paulo, Brazil. Email: lucasnacif@usp.br.

Abstract: Translational medicine has become a priority, but there is still a big difference between the arrival of new treatments and investment. Basic science should not be neglected because the translation from basic research is not sustained in the absence of basic research. The purpose of this literature review was to analyze the translational medicine in the liver transplant field: liver ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), immunosuppression, clinical and surgical complications, small-for-size syndrome (SFSS), rejection, and ongoing innovations (liver machine, liver preservation, artificial livers, and regenerative medicine). We performed a systematic literature review that were updated in October 2016. The searches were performed in the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Review, PubMed/Medline, Embase, and LILACS databases. All the selected studies on the management of translational medical research in liver transplantation (LT) were analyzed. Initially the search found 773 articles. Methodological viewing and analysis of the articles, followed by the application of scientific models, including translational medicine in the liver transplant field. In conclusions, this review demonstrates the application of scientific research with translation medical benefits regarding the LT. The literature has a great tendency, improvements and investments in the study of translational medicine in LT. Innovative studies and technologies from basic science help to clarify clinical doubts. Moreover, evidence increases the importance of scientific research in quality of clinical practice care.

Keywords: Liver transplantation (LT); transplantation; systematic review; translational medical research


Received: 27 August 2018; Accepted: 28 October 2018; Published: 12 November 2018.

doi: 10.21037/tgh.2018.10.14


Introduction

Translational medicine aims to introduce innovations from basic research to clinical development and has become a priority. Nevertheless, there is still a vast challenge to the arrival of new treatments and their real benefits for practical medicine (1). Indeed, advances are not sustained by the absence of basic research, and therefore strategies and a methodology have been shaped in order to develop new treatment, mainly for complex diseases that demand better resolutions (1).

Liver transplantation (LT) is an efficacy approach and complex therapeutic technique in medicine. Despite of all basic research accomplished for this therapeutic method, this procedure still has many complications that require scientific models in order to improve the results (2). Additionally, promoting the validation of studies in precision medicine, immunological and surgical fields (including genome and epigenome studies), nanotechnology, signaling pathways, and biobanking could improve the advances of translational research and personalized medicine toward LT, offering potential solutions for further advancement through better integration between health care, academia, and industry (3).

The purpose of this literature systematic review was to analyze the translational process in the specific setting of LT, including liver ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), immunosuppression, clinical and surgical complications, small-for-size syndrome (SFSS), rejection, and ongoing innovations (liver machine, liver preservation, artificial livers, and regenerative medicine).


Methods

Identification and selection of the studies

This literature systematic review was performed to up to date the translational medical research in LT. The Medline-PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Databases (Controlled Trials and systematic review) and LILACS databases were electronically searched for articles published from January 2000 to October 2016, and updated in 19 October 2016.

The Mesh-terms utilized in Medline-PubMed database for literature search were developed using the PICO structure: patient, intervention, comparison or control, outcome. The Mesh-terms were used in combination with “OR”. The results for the search Mesh-terms used “P” (Patients) were associated with the result that formed with the “I” (Intervention), using the “AND” and “NOT” operators.

The Medline-PubMed search was conducted in PubMed (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) and used the Mesh-terms: (((((“Liver Transplantation”[Mesh]) AND “Translational Medical Research”[Mesh]) and (((((“Liver Transplantation”[Mesh]) AND “Translational Medical Research”[Mesh]) OR “Genomics”[Mesh]) OR “Epigenomics”[Mesh]) OR “Molecular Targeted Therapy”[Mesh]) OR “Bioethics”[Mesh])))). The equal strategy was used the others databases in the Embase (www.embase.com) and LILACS (http://lilacs.bvsalud.org) with the terms: (((((“Liver Transplantation”[Mesh]) AND “Translational Medical Research”[Mesh]). The Cochrane Library Database (http://www.cochrane.org) was searched for registered and published systematic reviews (CDSR) and clinical trials (CCTR) on the management of LT and Translational Medical Research.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Selection criteria were performed within the research question with the PICO structure; therefore, randomized controlled trials, non-randomized controlled trials, or comparative clinical studies and others were included. Specific analysis and article selection in the LT surgical approach include the following topics: liver IRI; immunosuppression; complications: clinical and surgical; SFSS; rejection; and miscellaneous (liver machine and liver preservation; artificial liver and regenerative medicine; and experimental LT model).

Data collection, analysis, and critical evaluation

Independently the reviewers were assessed the studies quality and extracted data. The quality and selection of the studies data was evaluated by 2 researchers (LS Nacif and V Kim). In case of discordance, the researchers promoted a consensus to select the final verdict. The study design and quality of the studies, level of evidence, and article choice were based on the article’s close relation to the topic of this review.


Results

Study selection and study quality

Initially the search found 773 articles. The entire study selection and description are detailed in Figure 1.

Figure 1 Flowchart of the study selection.

The characteristics of all search and databases were demonstrated on Table 1. Cochrane Library Database (http://www.cochrane.org) literature was searched for registered and published systematic reviews (CDSR) and clinical trials (CCTR) on the management of LT and Translational Medical Research (Table 1).

Table 1
Table 1 Characteristics of all search and databases
Full table

Articles selection with PICO structure were summarized in Supplementary files.

In the qualitative analysis of the present study we selected 44 studies for further analysis (4-23), the specific analysis was demonstrated on Figure 1 and Table 2 (24-47).

Table 2
Table 2 Characteristic of studies with liver transplantation and translational medical research
Full table

Qualitative analysis evaluation of the selected articles was follow below as liver IRI (n=9); immunosuppression (n=16); SFSS (n=3); acute cellular rejection (ACR) (n=11); liver machine and preservation; artificial livers and regenerative medicine (n=5) (4-23). The sensitive analysis shows us the vast presence of prospective original studies in these fields with more than 33 articles selected, the others was retrospective and reviews. The articles selected in the search were detailed and demonstrated in Table 2 (24-47). The selected articles were initially tabulated and characterized according to study type and PICO structures (Table 2).


Discussion

The present subject of this article shows us the important topic from “bench to bedside” is being re-thought around the world in the scientific and health-care communities. An integrated institutional, multidisciplinary medical and research approach for the application of translational medicine promotes the validation of studies to translate to the clinical and surgical fields regarding LT. Indeed, diverse advances on translational research have been made over the past decades in the field of LT in an attempt to increase organ utilization and improve the health care for these patients.

Liver IRI is an important complication from hemorrhagic shock, large resection, and transplant. IRI in general is a dynamical manner with two stages: the local insult on ischemia phase and reperfusion phase with inflammation mediators (12). Regarding the LT process, these injuries occur at three distinct steps: firstly, the liver is stored at 0 °C to 4 °C after explanted from the donor (cold ischemia); then followed by the vascular anastomosis (warm ischemia). The ischemia period increases the liver temperature 0.5 °C/minute. Liver reperfusion configures the third step (8,10,11). Over the last decade, the prevention of early graft failure was performed using some therapeutic approach and donor-recipient well match strategies to prevent and decrease the IRI effects.

Immunosuppressive therapy has been optimized and evolving over the last years following LT (2). The therapeutic options vary from diverse types of agents and depend on the specific patient whether one should use the immunosuppression agent alone or in association. The types of LT immunosuppression drugs include: calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs), cyclosporine (CsA) or TAC; mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), azathioprine (AZA), mTOR inhibitors (rapamycin), and steroids (methylprednisolone or prednisone) (2). Post-transplant acute or chronic rejection and fibrosis are even difficulties to obtaining long-term survival in LT. Some translational studies show us interesting advances in this field, the mostly studies found in this review was regarding the acute cellular rejection (n=11) and immunosuppression (n=16).

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) after liver transplant is one of the biggest clinical problems that arise to be related with genetic and non-genetic determinants. CNI is considered the main guilty in the development of CKD after LT (15). Kidney injury is usual in recipients with cirrhosis and related with decrease of survival rate after LT. This dysfunction perhaps associated to damage or functional alterations and can be better with following the LT.

Another poorly understood complication in LT is the concept of early allograft dysfunction (EAD), which demonstrates post-transplantation with increase serum transaminases, cholestasis and coagulopathy (28). Chronic liver graft dysfunction is the main morbidity and late graft waste cause after LT.

Small remnant of the liver or a small-for-size liver commonly induces SFSS or post-hepatectomy liver failure (PHLF). An inordinate portal flow for these small livers is primordial factor for SFSS (45). Some of these modalities, as living donor LT or split livers, were solutions to the liver donor shortages and decrease the waiting-list time for the patients to the LT procedure (45). This study shows us some specific papers on raising the mortality rate and require the progress of organ culture system that livers can be cultured and hold ex situ for a long time.

Regenerative medicine has demonstrated feasible for “bench-to-bedside” translational research in cell progress, stem cell biology and tissue engineering (46). We found some papers regarding models of functioning livers that have been engineered application “natural tissue” scaffolds and are in evolution to produce kidneys, pancreas, and small intestines.

The regenerative potential of the liver is unparalleled with its regeneration recover after damage from ischemia, resection, and acute or chronic rejection (47). The signatures of gene expression were characterized for these events and may be possible to precise therapies to decrease damage, improve regeneration and survival rates.

The limitations of this study were that we were unable to perform a meta-analysis due to the diversity and heterogeneity of the papers studied. This study has others limitations; the specific outcomes of interest have been evaluated separated. In this subject, more randomized clinical trials are needed to focus on translational medicine and LT. The benefit of this systematic review was to evaluate more patients with important positive factors in the liver transplant field. This is an original research that we described a systematic review of articles that shows us an important topic from “bench to bedside” is being re-thought around the world in the scientific and health-care communities. Indeed, diverse advances on translational research have been made over the past decades in the field of LT in an attempt to increase organ utilization and improve the health care for these patients.


Conclusions

Translational medicine was initially conceived as an integrated institutional, multidisciplinary, medical research approach toward the application of “bench-to-bedside” rather than promoting advancement and technologies in LT around the world in the scientific and health-care communities.

This systematic review demonstrated due to the increasing number of publications that have been improvements regarding the study of translational medicine in LT. Innovative studies and technologies from basic science help to clarify clinical doubts and basic scientific research has increasingly contributed to the quality of care in clinical practice.


Supplementary

Articles selection with PICO structure

  • Liver transplantation AND Translational Medical Research
  • Duplicates: 5

    (“Liver Transplantation”[Mesh]) AND “Translational Medical Research”[Mesh]

    Cochrane: 11

    (“Liver Transplantation”[Mesh]) AND “Translational Medical Research”[Mesh]

    PubMed: 6

    ‘Liver Transplantation’ AND ‘translational research’

    Embase: 222

  • (Epigenomics OR Genomics OR Molecular Targeted Therapy) AND Liver Transplantation
  • Duplicates: 14

    (((“Epigenomics”[Mesh]) OR “Genomics”[Mesh]) OR “Molecular Targeted Therapy”[Mesh]) AND “Liver Transplantation”[Mesh]

    PubMed: 53

    (Genomics OR Epigenetics OR molecularly targeted therapy) AND Liver Transplantation

    Embase: 330

    (Genomics OR Epigenomics OR molecularly targeted therapy) AND Liver Transplantation

    Cochrane: 1


Acknowledgements

None.


Footnote

Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.


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doi: 10.21037/tgh.2018.10.14
Cite this article as: Nacif LS, Kim V, Galvão F, Ono SK, Pinheiro RS, Carrilho FJ, D’Albuquerque LC. Translational medical research and liver transplantation: systematic review. Transl Gastroenterol Hepatol 2018;3:91.

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