%0 Journal Article %A Anil J. Trindade %A Tany Thaniyavarn %A Nikroo Hashemi %A Antonio Coppolino III %A John C. Kennedy %A Hari R. Mallidi %A Souheil El-Chemaly %A Hilary J. Goldberg %T 1-year outcomes for lung transplantation recipients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease %D 2021 %R 10.1183/23120541.00103-2021 %J ERJ Open Research %P 00103-2021 %V 7 %N 3 %X Advanced hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis are absolute contraindications to lung transplantation. [ 1] However, whether fatty liver disease with mild–moderate fibrosis contributes to increased adverse outcomes post-lung transplantation remains unknown. We present a retrospective analysis of patients transplanted at Brigham and Women's Hospital between 2015 and 2017 to identify whether patients with mild–moderate non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) experience increased short-term complications compared to patients with normal liver architecture. Patients with advanced (F3–F4) fibrosis and/or cirrhosis were considered non-suitable transplant candidates, a priori. This study was powered for a difference in index hospital-free days within the first 30 days of 25% (α=0.05, β=0.8). Secondary outcomes included index intensive care unit (ICU)-free days within the first 10 days post-transplant, perioperative blood product transfusion, incidence of index hospitalisation arrhythmias and delirium, need for insulin on discharge post-transplant, tacrolimus dose required to maintain a trough of 8–12 ng·mL−1 at index hospital discharge, and 1-year post-transplant incidence of insulin-dependent diabetes, acute kidney injury, acute cellular rejection, unplanned hospital readmissions and infection. 150 patients underwent lung transplantation between 2015 and 2017 and were included in the analysis; of these patients 40 (27%) had evidence of NAFLD. Median index hospital-free days for patients with NAFLD were non-inferior to those without (16 days, IQR 10.5–19.5 versus 12 days, IQR 0–18.0, p=0.03). Regarding secondary outcomes, both index hospitalisation and 1-year outcomes were non-inferior between patients with NAFLD and those with normal liver architecture. This study demonstrates that mild–moderate severity NAFLD may not be a contraindication to lung transplantation.In this single-centre, retrospective analysis of lung transplant recipients, we identified that mild–moderate non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is associated with acceptable perioperative and 1-year outcomes https://bit.ly/36WNzhi %U https://openres.ersjournals.com/content/erjor/7/3/00103-2021.full.pdf