Literature DB >> 29173394

Outcome after heart transplantation from donation after circulatory-determined death donors.

Simon Messer1, Aravinda Page1, Richard Axell1, Marius Berman1, Jules Hernández-Sánchez2, Simon Colah1, Barbora Parizkova1, Kamen Valchanov1, John Dunning1, Evgeny Pavlushkov1, Sendhil K Balasubramanian1, Jayan Parameshwar1, Yasir Abu Omar1, Martin Goddard1, Stephen Pettit1, Clive Lewis1, Anna Kydd1, David Jenkins1, Christopher J Watson3, Catherine Sudarshan1, Pedro Catarino1, Marie Findlay1, Ayyaz Ali1, Steven Tsui1, Stephen R Large4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The requirement for heart transplantation is increasing, vastly outgrowing the supply of hearts available from donation after brain death (DBD) donors. Transplanting hearts after donation after circulatory-determined death (DCD) may be a viable additive alternative to DBD donors. This study compared outcomes from the largest single-center experience of DCD heart transplantation against matched DBD heart transplants.
METHODS: DCD hearts were retrieved using normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) or direct procurement and perfusion (DPP). During NRP, perfusion was restored to the arrested heart within the donor with the exclusion of the cerebral circulation, whereas DPP hearts were removed directly. All hearts were maintained on machine perfusion during transportation. A retrospective cohort of DBD heart transplants, matched for donor and recipient characteristics, was used as a comparison group. The primary outcome measure of this study (set by the United Kingdom regulatory body) was 90-day survival.
RESULTS: There were 28 DCD heart transplants performed during the 25-month study period. Survival at 90 days was not significantly different between DCD and matched DBD transplant recipients (DCD, 92%; DBD, 96%; p = 1.0). Hospital length of stay, treated rejection episodes, allograft function, and 1-year survival (DCD, 86%; DBD, 88%; p = 0.98) were comparable between groups. The method of retrieval (NRP or DPP) was not associated with a difference in outcome.
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that heart transplantation from DCD heart donation provides comparable short-term outcomes to traditional DBD heart transplants and can serve to increase heart transplant activity in well-selected patients.
Copyright © 2017 International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  circulatory death; direct procurement and perfusion; heart; normothermic regional perfusion; transplant

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29173394     DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2017.10.021

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


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