Maternal Liver Grafts More Tolerable for Children with Rare Disease
UCSF Pediatric Surgery - November 16, 2012
UCSF News reports that on a study that suggests maternal liver grafts more tolerable for children with biliary atresia, a rare, life-threatening disease, results that may have important implications for counseling parents on organ donation
Children with a rare, life-threatening disease that is the most common cause of neonatal liver failure – biliary atresia – better tolerate liver transplants from their mothers than from their fathers, according to a UCSF-led study.
In the study, researchers reviewed all pediatric liver transplants nationwide from 1996 to 2010, and compared the outcomes [...]