Literature DB >> 33133972

Psychosocial Predictors of Upper Extremity Transplantation Outcomes: A Review of the International Registry 1998-2016.

Sarah E Kinsley1, Shuang Song2, Palmina Petruzzo3, Claudia Sardu4, Elena Losina2, Simon G Talbot1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Upper extremity transplantation (UET) is becoming increasingly common. This article attempts to collate data from cases contributing to the International Registry on Hand and Composite Tissue Transplantation (IRHCTT), define psychosocial themes perceived as predictors of success using statistical methods, and provide an objective measure for optimization and selection of candidates.
METHODS: The IRHCTT provided anonymous data on UET recipients. A supplementary psychosocial survey was developed focusing on themes of depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety, interpersonal functioning and dependence, compliance, chronic pain, social support, quality of life, and patient expectations. We determined the risk of transplant loss and psychological factors associated with higher risk of transplant loss.
RESULTS: Sixty-two UET recipients reported to the IRHCTT. Forty-three psychosocial surveys (68%) were received, with 38 (88%) having intact transplants and 5 (12%) being amputated. Among recipients with a diagnosis of anxiety (N = 29, 67%), 5 (17%) reported transplant loss (P = 0.03). Among those with depression (N = 14, 33%), 2 recipients (14%) has transplant loss (P = 0.17); while 4 recipients (22%) with PTSD (N = 18, 42%) had transplant loss (P = 0.01). Of participants active in occupational therapy (N = 28, 65%), 2 (7%) reported transplant loss (P = 0.09). Of recipients with realistic functional expectations (N = 34, 79%), 2 (6%) had transplant loss versus 3 (34%) who were felt to not have realistic expectations (N = 9, 21%, P = 0.05). Recipients with strong family support (N = 33, 77%) had a lower risk of transplant loss compared with poor or fair family support (N = 10, 23%), but did not reach statistical significance (6% versus 30%, P = 0.14).
CONCLUSION: Anxiety, depression, PTSD, participation in occupational therapy, expectations for posttransplant function, and family support are associated with postsurgical transplant status.
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33133972      PMCID: PMC7544328          DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000003133

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open        ISSN: 2169-7574


INTRODUCTION

Upper extremity vascularized composite allotransplantation, commonly referred to as upper extremity transplantation (UET), has moved from an experimental option to the most commonly performed type of reconstructive transplantation.[1] This transition has occurred without detailed, comprehensive, and objective analysis of the factors that predict success or failure of these unique transplants. Anecdotal evidence and expert opinion suggestthat psychosocial factors are an important contributor to consistent, predictable, and reliable patient outcomes.[2] Much of our current research is centered on surgical technique, transplant survival, immunosuppression,[3-5] and rehabilitation protocols,[6,7] with limited emphasis placed on the importance of patient selection.[2,8-11] Often, UET candidacy is based on prior experience with more routine surgical procedures or based on biases from small numbers of transplants. To date, psychosocial factors in UET patients have been poorly published, likely related to the difficulty in gathering data in these areas and their seeming intangibility. This article presents the summary of data from the International Registry on Hand and Composite Tissue Transplantation (IRHCTT)—the primary registry for data from almost all UET centers worldwide—and describes psychosocial themes perceived as predictors of success using statistical methods. These data may offer important insights into defining objective measures for the optimization and selection of UET candidates.

METHODS

The IRHCTT is a global registry dedicated to collecting information on all face and UET. Through collaboration with the IRHCTT, deidentified data were collected in 2016 on 62 UET recipients (36 bilateral and 26 unilateral). This comprised the vast majority of UET recipients at this time. These data included factors pertaining to demographics; anatomy (level of amputation, transplant performed); graft status; medical, immunological (tissue matching, immunosuppression), surgical (ischemia time, vessels/nerves coapted), and rejection status; and social factors for transplant donors and recipients. Psychosocial factors were limited to alcohol, nicotine, and drug use, and an unstandardized perceived level of satisfaction. Given the limited psychosocial data, a supplementary survey was developed based on an aggregation of solid-organ transplant candidacy assessment instruments: the “Psychosocial Assessment of Candidates for Transplantation,”[12] the “Transplant Evaluation Rating Scale,”[13] and the “Stanford Integrated Psychosocial Assessment for Transplantation,”[14] which emphasized the importance of psychiatric history, family support, substance dependency history, knowledge of transplantation, and history of compliance. Our survey focused on themes of depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety, interpersonal functioning and dependence, compliance (including medication compliance, punctuality, and participation in therapy), chronic pain, social support, quality of life, and patient expectations. While several of these diagnoses were based on validated metrics, several were at the discretion of the treating team, accepting that the tradeoff for diagnostic accuracy was a greater sample size. The survey was distributed by email to the leaders at each worldwide UET center contributing to the IRHCTT. Emails were resent 3 times. Centers who did not respond were personally approached at the International Society of Vascularized Composite Allotransplantation (ISVCA) conference in 2017. The survey was completed by each center’s lead clinician, psychiatrist, or their designee. In the analysis, we included the 4 prospectively collected variables from the IRHCTT (alcohol, nicotine, drug use, and level of satisfaction) and 19 psychosocial risk factors from the supplementary survey focusing on UET recipients’ psychosocial health, including depression, PTSD, anxiety, interpersonal functioning and dependence, medication compliance, punctuality, participation in therapy, chronic pain, social support, quality of life, and patient expectations. Transplanted extremity status at the time of the survey was selected as the indicator of postsurgery outcome, coded as “intact” or “amputated.” Given the limited sample size and sparse expected cell frequency in the contingency table, the Fisher exact test of independence was used to test the association between psychosocial factors and postsurgical transplant status. The analysis was completed in SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, N.C.).

RESULTS

From the 19 worldwide transplant centers registered in the IRHCTT, deidentified data was collected on 62 UET recipients from 1998 to 2016. Of these 62 recipients, 43 psychosocial surveys (69%) were retrospectively completed by the centers. The mean follow up from surgery at the time of survey was 7 years with 6 surveys being completed within 1 year of transplant. Survey responses were scored between 1 and 5, with 1 being the least favorable answer and 5 being the most favorable, suggesting that transplant recipients with a wide range of psychosocial variables have been transplanted (see appendix 1, Supplemental Digital Content 1, which displays psychosocial survey of upper extremity transplant recipients, ). Of the 43 survey responses, 38 recipients (88%) had intact transplant(s) after receiving UET and 5 (12%) recipients had their transplant(s) amputated. Table 1 and Supplemental Digital Content 2 show the distribution of responses related to psychosocial factors of transplant recipients stratified by transplant status (intact or amputated) at the time of survey completion in 2017. (See appendix 2, Supplemental Digital Content 2, which displays summary statistics of survey result by graft status (intact/amputated), .)
Table 1.

Short Summary of Survey Results Statistics by Graft Status (Intact/Amputated)

Graft Status
Intact (N = 38), N (%)Amputated (N = 5), N (%)P*
Anxiety
 Not at all anxious14 (100.00)
 A little anxious11 (91.67)1 (8.33)
 Somewhat anxious9 (90.00)1 (10.00)0.0296
 Anxious4 (57.13)3 (42.86)
Depression
 Depressed8 (100.00)
 Somewhat depressed4 (66.67)2 (33.33)0.1718
 Good mood26 (89.66)3 (10.34)
Posttraumatic stress disorder
 No symptoms24 (96.00)1 (4.00)
 Some symptoms6 (60.00)4 (40.00)0.01262
 Many symptoms8 (100.00)
Participation in therapy
 Does not actively participate2 (10.00)
 Distant in therapy1 (100.00)
 Somewhat engaged in therapy but does not perform exercises at home4 (100.00)0.0872
 Engaged in therapy and sometimes performs exercises at home6 (75.00)2 (25.00)
 Actively participates and performs exercises at home26 (92.86)2 (7.14)
Were patients’ expectations for posttransplant function realistic?
 Yes32 (94.12)2 (5.88)0.0535
 No6 (66.67)3 (33.33)
Family/Friend Support System
 Poor (patient is alone and uses most outside services)2 (66.67)1 (33.33)
 Fair (support is involved when necessary, but patient relies on outside support)5 (71.43)2 (28.57)
 Good (support is involved and often assists with transportation and homecare)6 (100.00)0.1387
 Very involved (very involved support that assists in transportation and homecare)25 (92.59)2 (7.41)

*More than 20% of cells have expected frequencies <5, Fisher’: s exact was used to calculate P value.

Short Summary of Survey Results Statistics by Graft Status (Intact/Amputated) *More than 20% of cells have expected frequencies <5, Fisher’: s exact was used to calculate P value. In total, 29 of 43 transplant recipients (67%) were reported to have anxiety. Among those patients with anxiety, 5 underwent transplant removal (17%). No recipients without anxiety (N = 14, 33%) reported transplant loss (P = 0.03). One-third of our UET population were reported as having depression (N = 14, 33%). Of the 14 recipients treated for depression, there was minimally higher risk of transplant removal compared with patients without depression (N = 29, 67%), this difference is well below statistical significance (14% versus 10%; P = 0.17). Among UET recipients with PTSD (N = 18, 42%), 4 recipients (22%) had their transplant(s) removed; among non-PTSD transplant recipients (N = 25, 58%), only 1 subject (4%) underwent transplant removal (P = 0.02). We observed a negative association between participation in occupational therapy (OT) and transplant removal. While the majority of our UET recipients actively engaged in OT and home exercises (N = 28, 65%), recipients who did not “actively participate and perform exercises at home” (N = 15, 35%) had a nearly 3-fold risk of transplant removal compared with recipients who actively participated in therapy. This difference did not reach statistical significance (20% versus 7%; P = 0.09). Recipients who were not “always on time” for OT (N = 19, 44%) also had double the risk of transplant removal compared with recipients who were “always on time” for OT (N = 24, 55%), although again this did not reach statistical significance (16% versus 8%; P = 0.29). Most UET recipients in our study were felt to have realistic expectations toward posttransplant function. Recipients’ expectations toward posttransplant function show a strong association with transplant status. Among recipients felt to have realistic expectations of postsurgical function (N = 34, 79%), 2 recipients (6%) lost their transplants, compared with 3 recipients (33%) who did not have realistic expectations (N = 9, 21%; P = 0.05). The majority of UET recipients had good or very involved family/friend support at the time of survey completion (N = 33, 77%). Recipients with strong support had a lower chance of transplant removal compared with recipients with poor or fair support (N = 10, 23%), but the difference did not reach statistical significance (6% versus 30%; P = 0.14).

DISCUSSION

Through review of deidentified data in the IRHCTT, psychosocial data were found to be lacking on transplant recipients. A survey was developed to further evaluate the role of psychosocial factors of each transplant recipient, as perceived by each center’s transplant surgeon, psychiatrist, and/or designee. Transplant recipients with anxiety, depression, and symptoms of PTSD were more likely to have undergone transplant removal at the time of survey completion. Risk of transplant removal was negatively associated with active participation in OT, realistic expectations for posttransplant function, and family support. Psychosocial evaluation of factors associated with UET success is limited and, to date, this is the largest study of its kind. Other groups have correlated psychosocial variables with disability after extremity injuries and found similar importance of psychosocial variables.[15] On review of our own center’s first successful transplant recipient at 3.5 years posttransplant, we discussed the stability in psychosocial outcome scores as demonstrating “well compensated, both functionally and psychologically, functioning quite independently… and with very stable social support.”[16] Our quantitative findings mirror and strengthen this assessment of a psychosocially stable candidate with consistent social support and reliable compliance, leading to a low incidence of transplant failure. Transplant recipients with anxiety, depression, and poor compliance, as demonstrated by a lack of therapy participation and medication compliance, have a greater risk of transplant removal. While these findings may seem obvious and/or intuitive, we believe there is value in confirming this formally, and recognize that these are associations rather than either directly causative of transplant removal. Importantly, understanding these important variables allows us both to be cognizant during patient evaluation and also to focus resources in modifying those factors that can be optimized pre- and posttransplantation. These factors are not intended to be contraindications to candidacy. This study suffers from several important limitations. First, this is a retrospective study. Second, this field is limited by its small patient population, albeit including almost all transplant recipients to date worldwide. We have attempted to gather the most data possible using all data contained within the IRHCTT and individually surveying each center participating in the IRHCTT. Related to this, there may be a contribution of nonresponse bias. Third, due to the limited statistical power, we cannot draw definitive conclusions nor conduct stratified analysis for certain age groups and sex. Fourth, there is no standardized patient selection method,[2,8,17] and selection bias prevails in transplant candidacy. Fifth, there is limited global standardization of psychiatric care and psychosocial metric utilization between transplant centers. We chose to be inclusive to ensure international participation even though we realize that there is variability in psychosocial diagnoses. Sixth, since our survey data were collected from surgeons and psychiatrists, whose answers were based on reflection of patients, our results are also prone to recall bias. Seventh, this study is lacking in expert consensus of these psychosocial factors being associated with transplant outcomes and revalidation is needed. We are in the process of qualitative research methodology to better elucidate and confirm these factors. Eighth, we recognize reasons for UET loss or failure are multifactorial. The aim of this study was to examine whether psychosocial factors are associated with limb loss by any cause rather than the mechanism by which that may happen. Nevertheless, we believe that these data help form the basis for making informed choices and directing resources, and will help encourage further study into the psychosocial aspects of UET.

CONCLUSIONS

Our study suggests that psychosocial factors play a role in determining postoperative outcomes among UET recipients. Anxiety, depression, PTSD, participation in OT, expectations for posttransplant function, and family support are all associated with postsurgical transplant status, among which anxiety, PTSD, and posttransplant expectation reached statistical significance at alpha level 0.05. A deeper understanding of the psychosocial themes associated with UET outcomes is vital to developing standardized guidelines for recipient optimization and candidacy.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors gratefully acknowledge participants of the IRHCTT (Australia, Melbourne; Austria, Innsbruck; Belgium, Brussels; France, Lyon, Paris; India, Kochi, Kerala and Pondicherry; Italy, Monza; Mexico, Mexico City; Poland, Wroclaw; South Korea, Daegu; Spain, Madrid, Valencia; Taiwan, Kaohsiung; Turkey, Antalya; United Kingdom, Leeds; United States, Atlanta/Durham, Boston, Los Angeles, Louisville, Philadelphia, and San Antonio).
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1.  The history and evolution of hand transplantation.

Authors:  Abtin Foroohar; River M Elliott; Tae Won Benjamin Kim; Warren Breidenbach; Abraham Shaked; L Scott Levin
Journal:  Hand Clin       Date:  2011-09-21       Impact factor: 1.907

Review 2.  An overview of psychosocial assessment procedures in reconstructive hand transplantation.

Authors:  Martin Kumnig; Sheila G Jowsey; Elisa Moreno; Gerald Brandacher; Kodi Azari; Gerhard Rumpold
Journal:  Transpl Int       Date:  2013-11-14       Impact factor: 3.782

3.  The Stanford Integrated Psychosocial Assessment for Transplantation (SIPAT): a new tool for the psychosocial evaluation of pre-transplant candidates.

Authors:  José R Maldonado; Holly C Dubois; Evonne E David; Yelizaveta Sher; Sermsak Lolak; Jameson Dyal; Daniela Witten
Journal:  Psychosomatics       Date:  2012 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 2.386

Review 4.  Psychological aspects of hand transplantation.

Authors:  Martin Kumnig; Sheila G Jowsey; Andrea F DiMartini
Journal:  Curr Opin Organ Transplant       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 2.640

5.  The International Registry on Hand and Composite Tissue Transplantation.

Authors:  Palmina Petruzzo; Marco Lanzetta; Jean-Michel Dubernard; Luis Landin; Pedro Cavadas; Raimund Margreiter; Stephan Schneeberger; Warren Breidenbach; Christina Kaufman; Jerzy Jablecki; Frédéric Schuind; Christian Dumontier
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2010-12-27       Impact factor: 4.939

6.  Hand and upper extremity transplantation: an update of outcomes in the worldwide experience.

Authors:  Jaimie T Shores; Gerald Brandacher; W P Andrew Lee
Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 4.730

7.  Experience With Patient Referrals for Upper Extremity Transplantation at a U.S. Academic Medical Center.

Authors:  Harriet Kiwanuka; Mario A Aycart; Ericka M Bueno; Bohdan Pomahac; Simon G Talbot
Journal:  J Hand Surg Am       Date:  2017-06-23       Impact factor: 2.230

8.  Bilateral trans-humeral arm transplantation: result at 2 years.

Authors:  P C Cavadas; J Ibáñez; A Thione; L Alfaro
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 8.086

9.  What Factors Are Associated With Disability After Upper Extremity Injuries? A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Prakash Jayakumar; Celeste L Overbeek; Sarah Lamb; Mark Williams; Christopher J Funes; Stephen Gwilym; David Ring; Ana-Maria Vranceanu
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2018-11       Impact factor: 4.176

Review 10.  Emerging Ethical Challenges Raised by the Evolution of Vascularized Composite Allotransplantation.

Authors:  Arthur L Caplan; Brendan Parent; Jeffrey Kahn; Wendy Dean; Laura L Kimberly; W P Andrew Lee; Eduardo D Rodriguez
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2019-06       Impact factor: 4.939

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