Literature DB >> 19291586

Pre-transplant obesity in heart transplantation: are there predictors of worse outcomes?

Mahender Macha1, Ezequiel J Molina, Michael Franco, Lisa Luyun, John P Gaughan, James B McClurken, Satoshi Furukawa.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Morbid obesity is increasingly observed in patients being evaluated for heart transplantation and represents a relative contraindication. We sought to evaluate the influence of pre-transplant obesity on morbidity and mortality after heart transplantation.
DESIGN: We retrospectively reviewed 90 consecutive patients with preoperative obesity (BMI > or = 30) and 90 age matched patients with normal weight (BMI 19 - 26) who underwent heart transplantation at our institution between January 1997 and December 2005.
RESULTS: Morbidly obese patients experienced higher rates of pre-transplant diabetes (29% vs 15%, p < 0.05) and prolonged waiting time before transplantation (191.4+/-136.1 vs 117.4+/-143.2 days, p < 0.001). There were no significant differences in post-operative complications including rejection and major and minor infections. There was no difference in actuarial survival between the obese and control groups after a mean follow-up of 4.26+/-2.95 years (p = 0.513, log-rank statistic 0.452). Causes of death did not differ. Cox proportional hazard analysis revealed increased association of peripheral vascular disease (HR 31.718, p = 0.001), and pre operative inotropic support (HR 33.725, p = 0.013) with increased mortality in the obese group.
CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests morbid obesity does not affect survival or rates of infection and rejection after heart transplantation.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19291586     DOI: 10.1080/14017430902810911

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand Cardiovasc J        ISSN: 1401-7431            Impact factor:   1.589


  2 in total

1.  Designing a patient-specific search of transplant program performance and outcomes: Feedback from heart transplant candidates and recipients.

Authors:  Warren T McKinney; Cory R Schaffhausen; David Schladt; Marylin J Bruin; Sauman Chu; Jon J Snyder; Cindy Martin; Tamas Alexy; Bertram Kasiske; Ajay K Israni
Journal:  Clin Transplant       Date:  2020-12-19       Impact factor: 2.863

2.  The effect of body mass index on the development of acute kidney injury and mortality in intensive care unit: is obesity paradox valid?

Authors:  Mehmet Süleyman Sabaz; Sinan Aşar; Gökhan Sertçakacılar; Nagihan Sabaz; Zafer Çukurova; Gülsüm Oya Hergünsel
Journal:  Ren Fail       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 2.606

  2 in total

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