US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services indications for intestinal transplant
1. Failure of parenteral nutrition |
Impending liver failure (total bilirubin 3–6 mg/dL, progressive thrombocytopenia, progressive splenomegaly) or overt liver failure (portal hypertension, hepatosplenomegaly, hepatic fibrosis, cirrhosis) because of liver injury from parenteral nutrition |
Central venous catheter-related thrombosis of two central veins |
Frequent central line sepsis: 2 episodes/year of systemic sepsis secondary to line infections requiring hospitalization; a single episode of line-related fungemia; septic shock or acute respiratory distress syndrome |
Frequent episodes of severe dehydration despite intravenous fluid in addition to parenteral nutrition |
2. High risk of death attributable to underlying disease |
Desmoid tumors associated with familial adenomatous polyposis |
Congenital mucosal disorders (eg, microvillus atrophy, intestinal epithelial dysplasia) |
Ultra-short-bowel syndrome (gastrostomy, duodenostomy, residual small bowel ≤ 10 cm in infants and ≤ 20 cm in adults) |
3. Intestinal failure with high morbidity or low acceptance of parenteral nutrition |
Intestinal failure with high morbidity (frequent hospitalization, narcotic dependency) or inability to function (eg, pseudo-obstruction, high-output stoma) |
Patient’s unwillingness to accept long-term parenteral nutrition (eg, young patients) |
Adapted from information in reference 50.