Literature DB >> 15999061

Does duration of donor brain injury affect outcome after orthotopic pediatric heart transplantation?

Jonah Odim1, Hillel Laks, Anamika Banerji, Kaushik Mukherjee, Chris Vincent, Charles Murphy, Caron Burch, David Gjertson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We tested the hypothesis that duration of donor brain injury and death would have an adverse effect on recipient rejection and mortality in pediatric heart transplantation.
METHODS: Ninety-three cardiac transplants were performed at our center from July 1, 1997, through June 30, 2003. The primary study end points were the number of rejection episodes and the time to first rejection. Secondary outcomes were early and late mortality.
RESULTS: Among 88 recipients of 93 cardiac allografts, 5 (6%) and 1 (1%) received second and third allografts, respectively. Overall patient mortality (3 early and 2 late) was 6% (5/88), and overall graft loss was 6% (6/93). Median time from donor brain injury to declaration of brain death (brain injury interval), time from brain death to donor cardiectomy (brain death interval), and graft ischemia time were 38, 24, and 3.3 hours, respectively. Cox regression analysis (adjusting for United Network for Organ Sharing status, ventilator dependence, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and ventricular-assist device status, diagnosis of congenital heart disease, sex and cytomegalovirus mismatches, and type of immunosuppression) demonstrated that recipients of donor hearts with relatively long periods from brain injury to death declaration or from death to organ removal had significantly improved rejection-free survival (hazard ratios 0.3, P = .01, and 0.5, P = .05, for brain injury and brain death times, respectively). Prolonged donor heart ischemia did not impact rejection rate. Increasing brain injury interval, brain death interval, and graft ischemia time had no significant effect on mortality.
CONCLUSION: Longer brain injury and death intervals correlated with improved freedom from rejection but had no effect on mortality.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15999061     DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2005.02.038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg        ISSN: 0022-5223            Impact factor:   5.209


  3 in total

1.  Kidney injury molecule-1 is an early noninvasive indicator for donor brain death-induced injury prior to kidney transplantation.

Authors:  W N Nijboer; T A Schuurs; J Damman; H van Goor; V S Vaidya; J J Homan van der Heide; H G D Leuvenink; J V Bonventre; R J Ploeg
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2009-06-12       Impact factor: 8.086

2.  Cardiac dysfunction following brain death after severe pediatric traumatic brain injury: A preliminary study of 32 children.

Authors:  Vijay Krishnamoorthy; Sumidtra Prathep; Deepak Sharma; Yasuki Fujita; William Armstead; Monica S Vavilala
Journal:  Int J Crit Illn Inj Sci       Date:  2015 Apr-Jun

3.  A clinically relevant sheep model of orthotopic heart transplantation 24 h after donor brainstem death.

Authors:  Louise E See Hoe; Karin Wildi; Nchafatso G Obonyo; Nicole Bartnikowski; Charles McDonald; Kei Sato; Silver Heinsar; Sanne Engkilde-Pedersen; Sara Diab; Margaret R Passmore; Matthew A Wells; Ai-Ching Boon; Arlanna Esguerra; David G Platts; Lynnette James; Mahe Bouquet; Kieran Hyslop; Tristan Shuker; Carmen Ainola; Sebastiano M Colombo; Emily S Wilson; Jonathan E Millar; Maximillian V Malfertheiner; Janice D Reid; Hollier O'Neill; Samantha Livingstone; Gabriella Abbate; Noriko Sato; Ting He; Viktor von Bahr; Sacha Rozencwajg; Liam Byrne; Leticia P Pimenta; Lachlan Marshall; Lawrie Nair; John-Paul Tung; Jonathan Chan; Haris Haqqani; Peter Molenaar; Gianluigi Li Bassi; Jacky Y Suen; David C McGiffin; John F Fraser
Journal:  Intensive Care Med Exp       Date:  2021-12-24
  3 in total

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