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Who Needs a Liver Transplant in India? — Signs, Conditions & Next Steps

Who Needs a Liver Transplant in India? — Signs, Conditions & Next Steps 2025

By Dr. Srinivas Bojanapu, Liver Transplant & HPB Surgeon, Dhaara Speciality Hospital, Bangalore | Updated June 2025

In brief: A liver transplant is needed when the liver has permanently lost the ability to sustain life and no medical or surgical treatment short of replacement will restore adequate function. The decision is not just about diagnosis — it requires assessment of disease stage, complications, comorbidities, and available alternatives.

Every week, I meet families who were told “your father needs a liver transplant” and walked out of the hospital with no clear explanation of why — and conversely, families who were convinced they needed a transplant when their condition was still manageable with medication. Getting this call right is the most important thing a hepatologist or transplant surgeon does.

This guide answers the question plainly: who actually needs a liver transplant in India, and how do you know when that time has come?

Two Categories: Chronic Liver Disease and Acute Liver Failure

Liver transplant is indicated for two distinct situations:

Chronic Liver Disease (Cirrhosis)

Liver has been progressively damaged over months to years. Replacement is needed when irreversible scarring prevents adequate function. 85–90% of transplants in India fall in this category.

Acute Liver Failure (ALF)

Sudden, catastrophic liver failure in a previously healthy person. Can kill within days. Requires emergency transplant listing. Common causes: drug toxicity (paracetamol), acute viral hepatitis, Wilson’s disease crisis.

Diseases That Most Commonly Lead to Liver Transplant in India

Disease Proportion of Indian Transplants Key Point
Alcohol-Related Liver Disease (ALD)30–35%Requires 6 months abstinence; strong psychosocial support needed
Chronic Hepatitis B (HBV)20–25%HBV prophylaxis (HBIG + antivirals) prevents reinfection of new liver
Non-Alcoholic / Metabolic Fatty Liver (NAFLD/MAFLD)15–20% (rising rapidly)Linked to diabetes, obesity; may recur in transplanted liver if metabolic control poor
Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC)10–15%Milan Criteria (≤3 nodules, largest ≤3 cm, or single ≤5 cm); best treatment when within criteria
Biliary Atresia5–8% (nearly all paediatric)Most common reason for transplant in children; parents often serve as living donors
Autoimmune Hepatitis / PBC / PSC5–8%AIH may recur in new liver; PSC associated with IBD — colon surveillance required
Chronic Hepatitis C (HCV)3–5% (falling with DAAs)Direct-acting antivirals cure HCV before transplant now possible in many cases
Wilson’s Disease< 3%Genetic copper overload; transplant is curative — the new liver has normal copper metabolism
Acute Liver Failure (all causes)5–8%Medical emergency; time from diagnosis to transplant often < 72 hours

Warning Signs That Liver Disease Is Advancing Toward Transplant Threshold

Seek specialist evaluation urgently if you have any of these:

  • Jaundice (yellow eyes/skin) that is new, worsening, or persistent — indicates bilirubin the liver cannot clear
  • Ascites (fluid in abdomen) — first episode indicates decompensated cirrhosis; recurrent or refractory ascites needs transplant evaluation
  • Hepatic Encephalopathy — confusion, sleep reversal, personality change, ammonia buildup impairing brain function
  • Variceal Bleeding — vomiting blood or black tarry stools from ruptured oesophageal/gastric varices
  • Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis (SBP) — infection of ascitic fluid; one episode dramatically worsens prognosis
  • Hepatorenal Syndrome — kidney failure driven by liver failure; often marks the point of no return without transplant
  • Hepatopulmonary Syndrome — low oxygen due to abnormal vessels in lungs; corrects after transplant

Having any one of these complications for the first time is a clear signal to see a liver transplant centre — not just a hepatologist — for evaluation. These events mark the transition from compensated cirrhosis (where medical management works) to decompensated cirrhosis (where only transplant offers long-term survival).

Who Is NOT a Candidate for Liver Transplant?

Transplant is not suitable for everyone with liver disease. Absolute contraindications include:

  • Active, uncontrolled extrahepatic cancer (liver cancer outside Milan Criteria, or cancer elsewhere in the body)
  • Severe, irreversible heart or lung disease that would not survive major surgery
  • Active alcohol or substance use (without treatment and demonstrated abstinence)
  • Uncontrolled systemic infection or active sepsis
  • Anatomical barriers making surgery technically impossible

Relative contraindications — meaning they must be optimised but are not automatic disqualifications — include advanced age (>70 years assessed case by case), obesity (BMI >40 may need weight loss first), portal vein thrombosis (treatable with specialised surgical techniques), and HIV (transplants now performed in well-controlled HIV).

Told you are “not a candidate”? Contraindications in liver transplantation evolve rapidly with surgical advances. What was a contraindication 5 years ago may now be addressable. ABO-incompatible transplants, PVT reconstruction, complex retransplants — these are now routine at experienced centres. Get a second opinion from a high-volume transplant programme before accepting a “no”.

The Transplant Evaluation Process in India — What to Expect

  1. Initial consultation: Review of all existing reports, scans, and blood work. Determine if transplant is indicated and whether LDLT or DDLT is more appropriate.
  2. Recipient workup (2–5 days): CT volumetry of liver, cardiac stress testing, pulmonary function tests, dental clearance, cancer screening (colonoscopy, mammogram, Pap smear as relevant), kidney function, bone density.
  3. MDT presentation: Hepatologist, transplant surgeon, anaesthesiologist, cardiologist, and psychiatry/social work review the case together and either approve listing or request additional workup.
  4. NOTTO listing: For deceased-donor transplant, the patient is registered with ZCCK/NOTTO. MELD score determines priority.
  5. Living donor evaluation (parallel): A potential living donor — blood type compatible family member aged 18–55 with no significant medical issues — undergoes 5–7 days of independent evaluation.

Frequently Asked Questions

I have cirrhosis but feel fine. Do I need a transplant now?

Not necessarily. Compensated cirrhosis (no complications, MELD < 10–12) can be stable for years with proper management — abstinence from alcohol, antiviral therapy for HBV/HCV, weight loss for NAFLD, and regular 6-monthly ultrasound surveillance for liver cancer. Transplant is considered when the disease decompensates or MELD reaches 15.

My father is 68 years old — can he still get a liver transplant in India?

Age alone is not a disqualification. We have transplanted patients in their 70s at Dhaara. The key factors are biological age (how fit the heart and lungs are), frailty assessment, absence of active cancer, and ability to tolerate immunosuppression long-term. Each case is evaluated individually.

Can fatty liver (NAFLD) require a liver transplant?

Yes. When NAFLD progresses to NASH cirrhosis, liver failure can develop. NAFLD/NASH is now the fastest-growing indication for liver transplant both in India and globally. The risk is higher in patients with type 2 diabetes and obesity who have not controlled their metabolic disease.

Is there an alternative to liver transplant for cirrhosis?

There is no cure for advanced cirrhosis other than transplant. However, many complications of cirrhosis can be managed to delay the need for transplant: TIPS procedure for refractory variceal bleeding and ascites, banding for varices, lactulose/rifaximin for encephalopathy, diuretics for ascites. These are bridges, not cures — transplant remains the only definitive treatment for end-stage liver disease.

How quickly does a patient deteriorate once they need a transplant?

This varies enormously. A patient with MELD 15 and a single episode of ascites may be stable for 6–18 months. A patient with MELD 30 and recurrent HE can deteriorate within weeks. Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) — a sudden decompensation triggered by infection or bleeding — can be fatal within days. Do not delay transplant evaluation once complications begin.

Consult Dr. Srinivas Bojanapu

Liver Transplant & HPB Surgery · Dhaara Speciality Hospital, Yelahanka, North Bangalore

📞 +91 98450 23777  |  ✉ info@liverdoctor.in

Patients from Delhi · Mumbai · Hyderabad · Chennai · Kolkata welcome · Tele-consultation available

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Dr. Srinivas Bojanapu Hepatologist & Liver Transplant Surgeon
+91 87478 74888 (Dhaara) +91 96907 29690 WhatsApp +91 88846 94233
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