An evaluation is the first step in helping you and your child determine whether a transplant is the best treatment. The transplant team will evaluate the medical factors related to your child's liver failure. Not everyone who is evaluated for a liver transplant is an appropriate candidate.
Most of our liver transplants are referred to the program by primary care doctors or by a specialist. When a referral is made to our program, a transplant assistant will call you to schedule an appointment.
Your child’s transplant evaluation may include:
- Blood tests
- Chest X-ray
- Electrocardiogram
- Pulmonary function test
- Ultrasound
Your child will see the following:
- Hepatologist
- Transplant surgeon
- Transplant pharmacist
- Social worker
- Dietitian
- Financial counselor to review your insurance information
- Heart, kidney, genetics, and infectious disease consults
The hepatologist and surgeon will review the test results with you and answer any questions. When the evaluation is complete, the team will decide if your child is a good candidate to be added to national waiting list for available livers. Once on the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) waiting list, you will be notified by our team.
Parents with children on the waiting list will receive instructions about the importance of letting the team know about changing health conditions. Since a donor liver may become available at any time, you must always be available.
The wait time for a donor liver is typically less than one year. Stated by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR), our median transplant wait time is 5.1 months.
When a donor liver becomes available, testing is done to ensure that the organs are not damaged in any way. Then, the organ is matched to a transplant candidate on the waiting list who is compatible. In some cases, the team may conclude that the donor liver is not suitable. If this happens, the transplant will be cancelled. If a cancellation happens, remember that it is in your child's best interest.
Before your child's surgery, the care team will prepare your child for surgery.
This includes:
- Talking with the admitting doctor
- Drawing blood samples
- Taking chest x-rays
- Collecting a urine sample
- Swabbing the nose and throat for viral tests
- Starting an IV
This can be a stressful time for your child. Our nurses and other caregivers work hard to keep child comfortable and minimize the stress of these procedures.