| Literature DB >> 31106338 |
Matthias Fuchs1,2, David Schibilsky1,2, Wolfgang Zeh1,2, Michael Berchtold-Herz1,2, Friedhelm Beyersdorf1,2, Matthias Siepe1,2.
Abstract
Heart failure has remained the leading cause of death globally for the last 15 years-and its prevalence will continue to rise. Fifty years ago, heart failure management was enriched by the possibility of a heart transplant. Despite impressive improvements in medical treatment for heart failure, a heart transplant remains the most effective long-lasting treatment for advanced heart failure in terms of mortality and quality of life. However, donor and recipient characteristics have changed dramatically in recent years, leading to more complex decision-making regarding organ acceptance and to more demanding operations and postoperative management. With improving pathophysiological understanding in the last decades, today's scientific interest still focuses on basic knowledge. How to retrieve and conserve organs to minimize ischaemic injury; how best to allocate them, considering the likelihood of success (developing a heart-allocation scoring system similar to that for lung allocation); how to match donor/recipient characteristics (ABO blood-group antigen compatibility versus incompatibility); and how to avoid graft failure, rejection and secondary morbidities such as malignomas and cardiac allograft vasculopathy after the heart transplant-all these factors remain fundamental challenges in today's transplant medicine. The use of ex vivo perfusion (e.g. via the Organ Care System®, TransMedics, Andover, MA, USA) may play an important role in this change. Remarkably, there are huge regional divergences in current transplant practices: Whereas the number of transplants continues to rise in most Eurotransplant countries and other major transplant networks, there are some countries in which transplant numbers are static or even dropping (as in Germany). This difference results in wide variations across different countries as to how advanced heart failure is treated using mechanical circulatory-assist devices.Entities:
Keywords: Heart failure; Heart transplant; Long-term survival; Mechanical circulatory support
Year: 2019 PMID: 31106338 PMCID: PMC6537946 DOI: 10.1093/ejcts/ezz107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cardiothorac Surg ISSN: 1010-7940 Impact factor: 4.191
Figure 1:Prevalence of heart failure by sex and age (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2011–2014)—adopted and modified from Ref. [2].
Indications and contraindications for a heart transplant
| Indications for a heart transplant |
End-stage heart failure, NYHA IV functional class with congestion Limited prognosis without further support Limited treatment options Motivated, well-informed patient Mental stability Compliant |
| Absolute and relative contraindications for a heart transplant |
Severe peripheral arteriosclerosis/cerebrovascular disease Active infection Malignancy Severely impaired renal function Severe systemic disorders, multiorgan failure Secondary disease with poor prognosis Intellectual impairment Pharmacologically irreversible pulmonary hypertension (→ proof of candidacy for LVAD with re-evaluation of haemodynamics under unloaded left ventricular conditions) BMI before a heart transplant >35 kg/m2 Persistent drug abuse |
Adapted from Ref. [9].
BMI: body mass index; LVAD: left ventricular assist device; NYHA: New York Heart Association.
Figure 2:Parametric survival curve and associated hazard function with 70% confidence limit for survival after implantation of a continuous-flow LVAD or BiVAD. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [12]. BiVAD: biventricular assist device; LVAD: left ventricular assist device.
Figure 3:Kaplan–Meier survival in adult heart transplant recipients by era (transplants: January 1982–June 2015). Reprinted with permission from Ref. [8].
Figure 4:Survival rates in trials and registry reports of heart transplantation and chronic mechanical circulatory support as DT. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [48]. DT: lifetime therapy; HM: HeartMate; LVAD: left ventricular assist device; OMM: optimal medical management; VE/XVE: early generation ventricular assist devices (HeartMate VE/XVE, Thoratec Corp., Pleasanton, CA).
Figure 5:(A) Number of adult and paediatric heart transplants by year (transplants: 1982–2015) and geographic region. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [8]. (B) Overview of new high-urgency registrations and total heart transplants 2004–2017 in Germany (data: Eurotransplant).
Figure 6:Adult and paediatric heart transplants according to median donor age by location and year. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [8].
Video 1:During a training session, a porcine heart after harvesting and preparation is connected via the aorta to the ex-vivo perfusion device (Organ Care System®, TransMedics, Andover, MA, USA) and perfused with autologous blood. After 20 seconds of reperfusion, the heart starts beating and will be secured for clinical and biochemistry assessment.
Comparing a HTx to a VAD: benefits and limitations
| Advantages | Disadvantages | Problems to solve | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTx |
Benefit in terms of long-term mortality Better quality of life |
Organ shortage Precise immunomatching (HLA/ABO) Organ rejection |
Improvement in organ allocation Preservation Reducing ischaemia-reperfusion injury (e.g. OCS®) Expand donor pool to potentially marginal donors |
| VAD |
‘Unlimited’ availability |
Durability Energy supply Bleeding/thrombosis Infection Technical malfunction |
Develop complete and durable intracorporeal devices Transcutaneous energy transfer Lower bleeding/thrombosis risk |
ABO: ABO blood group system; HLA: human leucocyte antigen; HTx: heart transplant; OCS: Organ Care System; VAD: ventricular assist device.