Background: The aim of our study was to determine the prevalence and predictive factors for post-transplant anemia (PTA) at 6 (M6) and 12 (M12) months after orthotopic liver-transplant (OLT) in a cohort of 97 consecutive patients.
Methods: Anemia was defined at M6 and M12 according to the World Health Organization criteria, i.e., a hemoglobin level of <12 g/dL for women and <13 g/dL for men. Immunosuppression relied on tacrolimus and steroids with or without mycophenolate mofetil.
Results: Anemia was present in 64.5%, 50%, and 52.8% of patients before OLT and at M6 and M12, respectively. Of the anemic patients, 33% (M6) and 30.3% (M12) received recombinant erythropoietin therapy. In multivariate analysis, the independent predictive factors for anemia at M6 were mean corpuscular volume (<85 fl) at day 7, daily steroid dosage (<0.3 mg/kg), serum creatinine (>130 micromol/L), and hemoglobin level (<11 g/dL) 1 month after OLT (M1). Independent predictive factors for anemia at M12 were daily steroid dosage at M1 (<0.3 mg/kg), hematocrit at M1 (<33%), red blood cell count at M6 (<3.75 T/L), daily dosage at M1 of cyclosporine and tacrolimus, and OLT for causes other than alcohol abuse.
Conclusion: Anemia is highly prevalent within the first year post-OLT. This deserves further investigation and appropriate treatment.