The evolution of liver diseases to end-stage liver disease or to acute hepatic failure, the evaluation process for liver transplantation, the organ allocation decision-making, as well as the post-transplant outcomes are different between female and male genders. Women's access to liver transplantation is hampered by the use of model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score, in which creatinine values exert a systematic bias against women due to their lower values even in the presence of variable degrees of renal dysfunction. Furthermore, even when correcting MELD score for gender-appropriate creatinine determination, a quantifiable uneven access to transplant prevails, demonstrating that other factors are also involved. While some of the di...
Abstract Greater graft-failure-risk of female-to-male liver transplantation (LT) is thought to be du...
NAFLD/NASH is a sex-dimorphic disease, with a general higher prevalence in men. Women are at reduced...
Background & Aims: The impact of gender and donor/recipient gender mismatch on LT outcomes is contro...
The evolution of liver diseases to end-stage liver disease or to acute hepatic failure, the evaluati...
The evolution of liver diseases to end-stage liver disease or to acute hepatic failure, the evaluati...
Women constitute a particular group among patients with chronic liver disease and in the post-liver ...
Women constitute a particular group among patients with chronic liver disease and in the post-liver ...
Introduction. A systematic bias against women, resulting from the use of creatinine as a measure of ...
Walter Costa MB, Gärtner C, Schmidt M, Berg T, Seehofer D, Kaiser T. Revising the MELD Score to Addr...
Background/Aims: Clinical data may be suggestive for differences in patient survival in gender-incom...
Female gender has been reported to be a risk factor for graft loss after liver transplantation for h...
A growing literature has highlighted important differences in transplant-related outcomes between me...
Chronic liver disease progresses in men and women at different rates, regardless of the etiology of ...
SummaryA growing literature has highlighted important differences in transplant-related outcomes bet...
The liver is recognized as a sex hormone-responsive organ. Gender-specific differences in liver func...
Abstract Greater graft-failure-risk of female-to-male liver transplantation (LT) is thought to be du...
NAFLD/NASH is a sex-dimorphic disease, with a general higher prevalence in men. Women are at reduced...
Background & Aims: The impact of gender and donor/recipient gender mismatch on LT outcomes is contro...
The evolution of liver diseases to end-stage liver disease or to acute hepatic failure, the evaluati...
The evolution of liver diseases to end-stage liver disease or to acute hepatic failure, the evaluati...
Women constitute a particular group among patients with chronic liver disease and in the post-liver ...
Women constitute a particular group among patients with chronic liver disease and in the post-liver ...
Introduction. A systematic bias against women, resulting from the use of creatinine as a measure of ...
Walter Costa MB, Gärtner C, Schmidt M, Berg T, Seehofer D, Kaiser T. Revising the MELD Score to Addr...
Background/Aims: Clinical data may be suggestive for differences in patient survival in gender-incom...
Female gender has been reported to be a risk factor for graft loss after liver transplantation for h...
A growing literature has highlighted important differences in transplant-related outcomes between me...
Chronic liver disease progresses in men and women at different rates, regardless of the etiology of ...
SummaryA growing literature has highlighted important differences in transplant-related outcomes bet...
The liver is recognized as a sex hormone-responsive organ. Gender-specific differences in liver func...
Abstract Greater graft-failure-risk of female-to-male liver transplantation (LT) is thought to be du...
NAFLD/NASH is a sex-dimorphic disease, with a general higher prevalence in men. Women are at reduced...
Background & Aims: The impact of gender and donor/recipient gender mismatch on LT outcomes is contro...