## Correct Answer: D. Jaundice less than 7 days before development of encephalopathy The question asks which parameter is NOT part of the transplantation selection criteria for Wilson's disease—specifically acute liver failure (ALF) secondary to Wilson's disease. The King's College Criteria (KCC) for ALF in Wilson's disease are well-established and widely adopted in Indian transplant centers. These criteria include: (1) bilirubin >300 µmol/L, (2) PT >100 seconds, and (3) age <10 years. These three parameters are INCLUSION criteria for urgent transplantation in Wilson's disease-related ALF. Option D—"jaundice less than 7 days before encephalopathy"—is NOT a formal selection criterion in the King's College Criteria. While the timing of jaundice-to-encephalopathy progression may be clinically relevant for prognosis, it is not part of the standardized transplant selection criteria. The KCC for Wilson's disease specifically uses the three parameters listed in options A, B, and C as hard cutoffs for transplant candidacy. This distinction is critical because transplant centers in India (AIIMS, Apollo, Fortis) use KCC as the gold standard for decision-making in acute Wilson's disease, and option D represents a clinical observation rather than a formal selection parameter. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Bilirubin > 300 µmol/L** — This IS a core King's College Criterion for transplantation in Wilson's disease-related acute liver failure. Hyperbilirubinemia >300 µmol/L indicates severe hepatic synthetic dysfunction and is a formal inclusion criterion. NBE trap: students may confuse this with chronic liver disease thresholds, but in acute Wilson's disease, this specific cutoff is mandatory for transplant consideration. **B. PT > 100 s** — This IS a core King's College Criterion for transplantation in Wilson's disease ALF. Prolonged PT >100 seconds reflects severe coagulopathy and hepatic synthetic failure, indicating urgent need for transplantation. This is a hard cutoff used in all major Indian transplant centers. NBE trap: students may think PT is only relevant in other causes of ALF, but it is equally critical in Wilson's disease. **C. Age < 10 years** — This IS a King's College Criterion specific to Wilson's disease. Children <10 years with ALF from Wilson's disease have worse outcomes with medical management alone and are prioritized for transplantation. This age cutoff is unique to Wilson's disease and not applied to other causes of ALF. NBE trap: students may confuse this with general pediatric transplant age limits, but this is a specific criterion for Wilson's disease prognosis. ## High-Yield Facts - **King's College Criteria for Wilson's disease ALF**: bilirubin >300 µmol/L, PT >100 s, and age <10 years are the three formal selection parameters. - **Jaundice-to-encephalopathy interval** is a prognostic marker (worse if <7 days) but NOT a formal transplant selection criterion in KCC. - **Wilson's disease ALF** has the worst prognosis among all causes of ALF; medical management alone has <10% survival without transplantation. - **Indian transplant centers** (AIIMS, Apollo, Fortis) use King's College Criteria as the gold standard for urgent transplant listing in acute Wilson's disease. - **Fulminant hepatic failure in Wilson's disease** requires transplantation in >90% of cases; medical management is rarely curative in acute presentation. ## Mnemonics **KCC-WD (King's College Criteria for Wilson's Disease)** **B**ilirubin >300, **P**T >100, **A**ge <10 — remember as BPA. These three parameters trigger urgent transplant listing in acute Wilson's disease. **Jaundice-Encephalopathy Trap** Jaundice-to-encephalopathy timing is a **prognostic marker** (worse if rapid), NOT a **selection criterion**. Prognosis ≠ transplant criteria. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the jaundice-encephalopathy interval with the King's College Criteria to test whether students confuse prognostic markers with formal transplant selection parameters. The rapid progression (jaundice <7 days before encephalopathy) is indeed a bad prognostic sign, but it is not part of the standardized KCC used for transplant decision-making. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian transplant centers, a 5-year-old with Wilson's disease presenting with ALF and bilirubin 350 µmol/L + PT 110 s will be listed urgently for transplantation based on KCC alone—the jaundice-to-encephalopathy timeline, while prognostically relevant, does not alter the transplant decision. This distinction prevents unnecessary delays in listing and ensures consistent application of evidence-based criteria across centers. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Transplantation chapter); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 297 (Liver Transplantation); Indian Society of Organ Transplantation (ISOT) guidelines on acute liver failure management._
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