0P-S6-2

 

PRESENT SITUATION IN MANAGEMENT OF CHILDREN WITH BILIARY ATRESIA IN JAPAN

Akira Matsui, M.D., Ph.D. 

Dept of Paediatrics, University of Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305-8575, Japan

 

In 2000, the Japanese Biliary Atresia (BA) Society published a report on a nationwide registry of 1,084 BA patients (686 females) from 1989 to 1998.  The aim of the present study was to summarise the results of the registry and to try to find measures to improve the long-term prognosis of this intractable disease.  Epidemiology: the first-born (507), the second-born (379), low birth weight infants (120), gestational age<36 weeks (35), chromosomal abnormalities (2/589), abnormal meconium colour (179/643), initially bile-pigmented stools (631/914), phototherapy (421/981), completely bottle-fed (261/963), pathologic bleeding (94), associated anomalies (215).  Initial surgery: portoenterostomy (986), age<60 days (452: 42.4%), Types I (121), II (23), III (911), disappearance of jaundice, cholangitis, recurrence of jaundice were not related with age at operation.  Outcome: survive without jaundice (642), survive with jaundice (232), dead (94), survive with transplant (208), dead after transplant (21). Conclusion: #1 perinatal epidemiology should be more thoroughly elucidated, #2 early referral is not satisfactory, #3 long-term prognosis is still poor in BA children and their QOL should be related to age at initial surgery.