P5849 - In-Hospital Mortality, Healthcare Costs, and Length of Stay (LOS) in Liver Transplant (LT) Recipients With MELD Exception Diagnoses vs Standard MELD Indications
Uchit Thapa, MD1, Suman Sharma, MD2, Venu Ganipisetti, MD3, Meghana Kakarla, MD4, Anish Paudel, MD5 1Baystate Medical Center, Hartford, CT; 2Baystate Medical Center, East Longmeadow, MA; 3Baystate Medical Center, Longmeadow, MA; 4Infirmary Health, Mobile, AL; 5Reading Hospital, Tower Health, Reading, PA Introduction: Liver transplant (LT) is mostly guided by MELD score criteria, but certain diagnoses such as Hepatocellular carcinoma, Hepatopulmonary syndrome, and Portopulmonary hypertension, form MELD exception criteria for transplant candidacy. Due to the limited literature comparing the standard MELD vs. MELD exception criteria, we conducted a NIS-based study comparing inpatient mortality, length of stay (LOS), and healthcare costs. Methods: We used the 2018-21 NIS database to identify all patients with liver transplantation by standard MELD and MELD exception diagnosis using appropriate ICD-10-CM codes. A univariate screen followed by multivariate logistic regression was performed to adjust for potential hospital and patient-level confounders. Stata 18.0 software was used to perform all statistical analyses. Results: Over 4 years, 26,990 Standard MELD patients who underwent LT were noted to have lower inpatient mortality (2.2% vs 6.25%) along with decreased odds of mortality on multivariate regression [OR 0.47 (0.34-0.65); p< 0.001]but resulted in longer LOS (18.5 vs 6.3 days). Similarly, 1,425 MELD exception patients also demonstrated increased LOS (21 vs 6.8 days) with decreased mortality with LT (3% vs 7.5%) but were not statistically significant [OR 1.0 (0.5-2.2); p-0.86].The highest cost of stay was noted in MELD exception with LT accounting for $652,868. CHF and ESRD were noted to be strong predictors of mortality whereas DM and HTN showed protective effects in both groups. Discussion: This study demonstrates a significant survival benefit for standard MELD patients who undergo liver transplantation. In contrast, despite the highest LOS and costs, MELD exception-based liver transplants do not seem to demonstrate a significant mortality reduction. While this may be possibly due to the smaller sample size of transplant exception cases, these findings also indicate the need to reevaluate the current transplant policies and focus on developing strategies to identify patients with the highest likelihood of survival outcomes.
Disclosures: Uchit Thapa indicated no relevant financial relationships. Suman Sharma indicated no relevant financial relationships. Venu Ganipisetti indicated no relevant financial relationships. Meghana Kakarla indicated no relevant financial relationships. Anish Paudel indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Uchit Thapa, MD1, Suman Sharma, MD2, Venu Ganipisetti, MD3, Meghana Kakarla, MD4, Anish Paudel, MD5. P5849 - In-Hospital Mortality, Healthcare Costs, and Length of Stay (LOS) in Liver Transplant (LT) Recipients With MELD Exception Diagnoses vs Standard MELD Indications, ACG 2025 Annual Scientific Meeting Abstracts. Phoenix, AZ: American College of Gastroenterology.