BACKGROUND: Infant heart transplant (HT) recipients have the best long-term survival of any age group, but the small donor pool and high early mortality limit the therapeutic effectiveness. We sought to determine the relationship between pre-HT diagnosis and early HT outcome to better define the mortality risk associated with a diagnosis of congenital heart disease (CHD) and to examine differences between early and current HT eras. METHODS: The Pediatric Heart Transplant Study (PHTS) database was used to identify 739 infant HT recipients at age ≤ 6 months between 1993 and 2008 divided into the following etiologic groups: cardiomyopathy (CM), 18%; hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) without surgery, 41%; HLHS with surgery, 9%; other CHD without surgery, 16%; and other CHD with surgery, 15%. Severity of illness at HT, post-HT survival, and era effects were compared. RESULTS: At 1 year after HT, survival was 89% for the CM group, which was the best, 79% for CHD without surgery, 82% for CHD with surgery, 79% for HLHS without surgery, and 70% for HLHS with surgery, which was the worst outcome. Hazard function analysis demonstrated the difference occurred within the first 3 months after HT. After adjusting for illness severity, differences in mortality risk persisted across etiologic groups. HT survival was similar in the current surgical era for HLHS with surgery, 71% (1993-1998) vs 70% (1999-2008). CONCLUSIONS: Infant HT recipients with different pre-HT diagnoses have significantly different post-HT outcomes. HLHS infants with surgery have the lowest survival and their outcome is unchanged in the current era.
BACKGROUND:Infant heart transplant (HT) recipients have the best long-term survival of any age group, but the small donor pool and high early mortality limit the therapeutic effectiveness. We sought to determine the relationship between pre-HT diagnosis and early HT outcome to better define the mortality risk associated with a diagnosis of congenital heart disease (CHD) and to examine differences between early and current HT eras. METHODS: The Pediatric Heart Transplant Study (PHTS) database was used to identify 739 infant HT recipients at age ≤ 6 months between 1993 and 2008 divided into the following etiologic groups: cardiomyopathy (CM), 18%; hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) without surgery, 41%; HLHS with surgery, 9%; other CHD without surgery, 16%; and other CHD with surgery, 15%. Severity of illness at HT, post-HT survival, and era effects were compared. RESULTS: At 1 year after HT, survival was 89% for the CM group, which was the best, 79% for CHD without surgery, 82% for CHD with surgery, 79% for HLHS without surgery, and 70% for HLHS with surgery, which was the worst outcome. Hazard function analysis demonstrated the difference occurred within the first 3 months after HT. After adjusting for illness severity, differences in mortality risk persisted across etiologic groups. HT survival was similar in the current surgical era for HLHS with surgery, 71% (1993-1998) vs 70% (1999-2008). CONCLUSIONS:Infant HT recipients with different pre-HT diagnoses have significantly different post-HT outcomes. HLHS infants with surgery have the lowest survival and their outcome is unchanged in the current era.
Authors: William T Mahle; Chenwei Hu; Felicia Trachtenberg; JonDavid Menteer; Steven J Kindel; Anne I Dipchand; Marc E Richmond; Kevin P Daly; Heather T Henderson; Kimberly Y Lin; Michael McCulloch; Ashwin K Lal; Kurt R Schumacher; Jeffrey P Jacobs; Andrew M Atz; Chet R Villa; Kristin M Burns; Jane W Newburger Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant Date: 2018-02-16 Impact factor: 10.247
Authors: Emilie Jean-St-Michel; James M Meza; Jonathon Maguire; John Coles; Brian W McCrindle Journal: Pediatr Cardiol Date: 2018-03-08 Impact factor: 1.655
Authors: Scott R Auerbach; Jilayne K Smith; Jane Gralla; Max B Mitchell; David N Campbell; Jim Jaggers; Biagio A Pietra; Shelley D Miyamoto Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant Date: 2012-07-11 Impact factor: 10.247
Authors: Matthew J O'Connor; Xuemei Zhang; Heather Griffis; Brian T Fisher; Kelly D Getz; Yimei Li; Joseph W Rossano; Kimberly Y Lin; Danielle S Burstein; Yuan-Shung Huang; Richard Aplenc Journal: Pediatr Cardiol Date: 2021-11-15 Impact factor: 1.655
Authors: Jacob R Miller; Kathleen E Simpson; Deirdre J Epstein; Timothy S Lancaster; Matthew C Henn; Richard B Schuessler; David T Balzer; Shabana Shahanavaz; Joshua J Murphy; Charles E Canter; Pirooz Eghtesady; Umar S Boston Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant Date: 2016-03-10 Impact factor: 10.247
Authors: Li Ma; Na Zhou; Rongjun Zou; Wanting Shi; Yuanyuan Luo; Na Du; Jing Zhong; Xiaodong Zhao; Xinxin Chen; Huimin Xia; Yueheng Wu Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol Date: 2021-02-25