Literature DB >> 12742420

Donor-transmitted coronary atherosclerosis.

Onnen Grauhan1, Johannes Patzurek, Manfred Hummel, Hans Lehmkuhl, Michael Dandel, Miralem Pasic, Yuguo Weng, Roland Hetzer.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Autopsies show that coronary atherosclerosis is present frequently in the young and healthy. However, according to our former guideline, we performed pre-transplant evaluation without coronary angiogram in donors <60 years. The purpose of this study is to evaluate to what extent native coronary atherosclerosis is transmitted through heart transplantation.
METHODS: Between April 1986 and December 2000, a total of 1253 patients underwent heart transplantation at our institution. If coronary evaluation with coronary angiogram or autopsy had been performed within 6 months after transplantation, we regarded focal and non-circumferential atherosclerosis with >or=50% stenosis in proximal segments of at least 1 coronary vessel of the donor heart as transmitted, native coronary atherosclerosis, rather than newly developed transplant vasculopathy.
RESULTS: We excluded 85 of 1253 (6.8%) cases because coronary evaluation was not performed within 6 months (n = 45) or because hearts underwent angiography during pre-transplant evaluation (n = 40). Of these, 2 patients with significant coronary atherosclerosis underwent transplantation and concurrent coronary artery bypass grafting. The prevalence of significant (stenosis >or=50%) and inadvertently transmitted coronary atherosclerosis was 7.0% (82/1168).
CONCLUSION: The prevalence of coronary atherosclerosis in patients who underwent angiography within 6 months after transplantation was 5.2% (49/950). Among subjects who had autopsies within the first 6 months after heart transplantation, we found significant coronary atherosclerosis (stenosis >or=50%) 15.1% (33/218), and among those with early graft failure (<10 days after transplantation), the prevalence was 22.8% (26/114). The prevalence of coronary atherosclerosis in the donor pool is high, and donor screening without coronary angiogram overlooks significant coronary atherosclerotic lesions (stenosis >or=50%) in a considerable number of cases (7.0%). Because donor-transmitted coronary atherosclerosis is a risk factor in short-term (early graft failure) survival after heart transplantation, we have now changed our policy to include coronary angiography as a standard in screening donors >or=40 years. However, to what extent donor coronary atherosclerosis is accepted undoubtedly must be made arbitrarily until an evidence-based algorithm becomes available.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12742420     DOI: 10.1016/s1053-2498(02)00655-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Heart Lung Transplant        ISSN: 1053-2498            Impact factor:   10.247


  6 in total

1.  Orthotopic heart transplantation with concurrent coronary artery bypass grafting or previous stent implantation.

Authors:  M Musci; M Pasic; O Grauhan; C Butter; E Potapov; Y Weng; R Meyer; R Hetzer
Journal:  Z Kardiol       Date:  2004-12

2.  The inhibitory effect of astilbin on the arteriosclerosis of murine thoracic aorta transplant.

Authors:  Jinping Zhao; Ping Li; Yunfeng Zhang; Xianguo Wang; Qilin Ao; Sihai Gao
Journal:  J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci       Date:  2009-04-28

3.  A new carotid artery transplantation model of rats.

Authors:  Sihai Gao; Ping Li; Jinping Zhao; Yunfeng Zhang; Yu Sun
Journal:  J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci       Date:  2009-02-18

4.  Transplant of stunned donor hearts rescued by pharmacological stress echocardiography: a "proof of concept" report.

Authors:  Tonino Bombardini; Sonia Gherardi; Ornella Leone; Rosa Sicari; Eugenio Picano
Journal:  Cardiovasc Ultrasound       Date:  2013-08-02       Impact factor: 2.062

5.  Current practice of heart donor evaluation in Germany: multivariable risk factor analysis confirms practicability of guidelines.

Authors:  Sylke Ruth Zeissig; Carl-Ludwig Fischer-Froehlich; Frank Polster; Nils R Fruehauf; Guenter Kirste; Irene Schmidtmann
Journal:  J Transplant       Date:  2013-09-30

6.  Medium-term outcome of recipients of marginal donor hearts selected with new stress-echocardiographic techniques over standard criteria.

Authors:  Tonino Bombardini; Giorgio Arpesella; Massimo Maccherini; Francesco Procaccio; Luciano Potena; Sonia Bernazzali; Ornella Leone; Eugenio Picano
Journal:  Cardiovasc Ultrasound       Date:  2014-06-16       Impact factor: 2.062

  6 in total

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