Literature DB >> 12352257

Pediatric heart transplantation.

Robert J Boucek1, Mark M Boucek.   

Abstract

Heart transplantation is now a treatment option with good outcome for infants and children with end-stage heart failure or complex, inoperable congenital cardiac defects. One-year and 5-year actuarial survival rates are high, approximately 75% and 65%, respectively, with overall patient survival half-life greater than 10 years. To date, survival has been improving as a result of reducing early mortality. Further reductions in late mortality, in part because of graft coronary artery disease and rejection, will allow achievement of the goal of decades-long survival. Quality of life in surviving children, as judged by activity, is usually "normal." Somatic growth is usually at the low normal range but linear growth can be reduced. Of infant recipients, 85% evaluated at 6 years of age or older were in an age-appropriate grade level. Long-term management of childhood heart recipients requires the collaboration of transplant physicians, given the increasing number of immunosuppressive agents and the balance between rejection and infection. Currently, recipients are maintained on immunosuppressive medications that target calcineurin (eg, cyclosporine, tacrolimus), lymphocyte proliferation (eg, azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil [MMF], sirolimus) and, in some instances antiinflammatory corticosteroids. Emerging evidence now suggests a favorable immunologic opportunity for transplantation in childhood and, conversely, a higher mortality rate in children who have had prior cardiac surgery. Further studies are needed to define age-dependent factors that are likely to play a role in graft survival and possible graft-specific tolerance (eg, optimal conditions for tolerance induction and how immunosuppressive regimens should be changed with maturation of the immune system). As late outcomes continue to improve, the need for donor organs likely will increase, as transplantation affords a better quality and duration of life for children with complex congenital heart disease, otherwise facing a future of multiple palliative operations and chronic heart failure.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12352257     DOI: 10.1097/00008480-200210000-00009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Opin Pediatr        ISSN: 1040-8703            Impact factor:   2.856


  5 in total

1.  Efficacy of signal-averaged electrocardiography in the young orthotopic heart transplant patient to detect allograft rejection.

Authors:  M S Horenstein; S F Idriss; R M Hamilton; R J Kanter; P A Webster; P P Karpawich
Journal:  Pediatr Cardiol       Date:  2006 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.655

2.  Immunosuppression in Pediatric Heart Transplantation: 2003 and Beyond.

Authors:  Subash C. Reddy; Karen Laughlin; Steven A. Webber
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2003-10

3.  Outcome of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for early primary graft failure after pediatric heart transplantation.

Authors:  Cecile Tissot; Shannon Buckvold; Christina M Phelps; D Dunbar Ivy; David N Campbell; Max B Mitchell; Suzanne Osorio da Cruz; Bill A Pietra; Shelley D Miyamoto
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2009-08-18       Impact factor: 24.094

Review 4.  Tacrolimus: a further update of its use in the management of organ transplantation.

Authors:  Lesley J Scott; Kate McKeage; Susan J Keam; Greg L Plosker
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 9.546

Review 5.  Peri-operative kidney injury and long-term chronic kidney disease following orthotopic heart transplantation in children.

Authors:  Aparna Hoskote; Michael Burch
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2014-08-14       Impact factor: 3.714

  5 in total

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