Background: Hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) is a rare and potentially fatal complication following liver transplantation.
Case presentation: A 63-year-old woman with decompensated liver cirrhosis secondary to hepatitis B virus infection underwent living donor liver transplantation using the right posterior section of her husband's liver (graft volume, 581 g; 56.8% of the recipient's standard liver volume). She developed small-for-size syndrome on postoperative day (POD) 7, and HPS was diagnosed on POD 12 by bone marrow aspiration (white blood cells, 300/μL; neutrophils, 30/μL). Given that she tested negative for viral (hepatitis B virus and cytomegalovirus) and bacterial infections, it was considered likely to be secondary HPS. Steroid pulse therapy was initiated, and her white blood cell count increased to 4290/μL on POD 15, indicating that her peripheral blood leukocytes had improved. There were no surgical complications, but the patient died of prolonged graft dysfunction with bacterial sepsis on POD 14.
Conclusions: We report a rare case of HPS occurring 2 weeks after living donor liver transplantation with a right posterior section graft, diagnosed early via bone marrow aspiration. This clinical course implies an association between HPS and graft dysfunction such as small-for-size syndrome. Further studies of the mechanism of hypercytokinemia-induced HPS are required to confirm the optimal treatment for HPS.
Keywords: Hemophagocytic syndrome; Liver transplantation; Small-for-size syndrome.