Liver transplantation is the only treatment that increases survival times of patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Patients who live further away from a transplant center are disadvantaged. Health care delivery via telehealth is an effective way to remotely manage patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Authors investigated the effects of telehealth on the liver transplant evaluation process.
Using regression models, authors evaluated the differential effects of telehealth vs. usual care on placement on the liver transplant waitlist. We also investigated the effects of telehealth on time from referral to initial evaluation by a transplant hepatologist, liver transplantation, and mortality.
Authors found that the use of telehealth was associated with a substantial reduction in time from referral to initial evaluation by a hepatologist and placement on the liver transplant waitlist-especially for patients with low MELD scores, with no changes in time to transplantation or pre-transplant mortality.
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