Influence of Transplant Center Procedural Volume on Survival Outcomes of Heart Transplantation for Children Bridged with Mechanical Circulatory Support

被引:0
|
作者
Alex Hsieh
Dmitry Tumin
Patrick I. McConnell
Mark Galantowicz
Joseph D. Tobias
Don Hayes
机构
[1] The Ohio State University College of Medicine,Department of Pediatrics
[2] Nationwide Children’s Hospital,Center for the Epidemiological Study of Organ Failure and Transplantation
[3] Nationwide Children’s Hospital,Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
[4] The Ohio State University College of Medicine,Department of Surgery
[5] Nationwide Children’s Hospital,Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery
[6] The Ohio State University College of Medicine,Department of Anesthesiology
[7] The Ohio State University College of Medicine,Department of Internal Medicine
[8] The Ohio State University,Section of Pulmonary Medicine, Nationwide Children’s Hospital
来源
Pediatric Cardiology | 2017年 / 38卷
关键词
Center volume; Donor; Mechanical circulatory support; Heart transplantation; Recipient; Survival;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Transplant center expertise improves survival after heart transplant (HTx) but it is unknown whether center expertise ameliorates risk associated with mechanical circulatory support (MCS) bridge to transplantation. This study investigated whether center HTx volume reduced survival disparities among pediatric HTx patients bridged with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), left ventricular assist device (LVAD), or no MCS. Patients ≤18 years of age receiving first-time HTx between 2005 and 2015 were identified in the United Network of Organ Sharing registry. Center volume was the total number of HTx during the study period, classified into tertiles. The primary outcome was 1 year post-transplant survival, and MCS type was interacted with center volume in Cox proportional hazards regression. The study cohort included 4131 patients, of whom 719 were supported with LVAD and 230 with ECMO. In small centers (≤133 HTx over study period), patients bridged with ECMO had increased post-transplant mortality hazard compared to patients bridged with LVAD (HR 0.29, 95% CI 0.12, 0.71; p = 0.006) and patients with no MCS (HR 0.33, 95% CI 0.19, 0.57; p < 0.001). Interactions of MCS type with medium or large center volume were not statistically significant, and the same differences in survival by MCS type were observed in medium- or large-volume centers (136–208 or ≥214 HTx over the study period). Post-HTx survival disadvantage of pediatric patients bridged with ECMO persisted regardless of transplant program volume. The role of institutional ECMO expertise outside the transplant setting for improving outcomes of ECMO bridge to HTx should be explored.
引用
收藏
页码:280 / 288
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Influence of Transplant Center Procedural Volume on Survival Outcomes of Heart Transplantation for Children Bridged with Mechanical Circulatory Support
    Hsieh, Alex
    Tumin, Dmitry
    McConnell, Patrick I.
    Galantowicz, Mark
    Tobias, Joseph D.
    Hayes, Don, Jr.
    PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY, 2017, 38 (02) : 280 - 288
  • [2] Biventricular mechanical support bridging to heart transplantation in children and infants: Results from a low-volume transplant center
    Tirilomis, Theodor
    Grossmann, Marius
    Steinmetz, Michael
    Schoendube, Friedrich A.
    PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, 2020, 24 (02)
  • [3] Incidence of temporary mechanical circulatory support before heart transplantation and impact on post-transplant outcomes
    Ouyang, David
    Gulati, Gunsagar
    Ha, Richard
    Banerjee, Dipanjan
    JOURNAL OF HEART AND LUNG TRANSPLANTATION, 2018, 37 (09) : 1060 - 1066
  • [4] Heart transplantation in patients bridged with mechanical circulatory support: outcome comparison with matched controls
    Bartfay, Sven-Erik
    Bobbio, Emanuele
    Esmaily, Sorosh
    Bergh, Niklas
    Holgersson, Jan
    Dellgren, Goran
    Bollano, Entela
    Karason, Kristjan
    ESC HEART FAILURE, 2023, 10 (04): : 2621 - 2629
  • [5] 30 Years of Heart Transplant: Outcomes After Mechanical Circulatory Support From a Single Center
    Finnan, Michael J.
    Bakir, Nadia H.
    Itoh, Akinobu
    Kotkar, Kunal D.
    Pasque, Michael K.
    Damiano, Ralph J., Jr.
    Moon, Marc R.
    Ewald, Gregory A.
    Schilling, Joel D.
    Masood, Muhammad F.
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2020, 113 (01) : 41 - 48
  • [6] Impact of mechanical circulatory support on survival in pediatric heart transplantation
    Marcos-Alonso, Sonia
    Gil, Nuria
    Garcia-Guereta, Luis
    Albert, Dimpna
    Tejero, Maria angeles
    Perez-Villa, Felix
    Bueno, Manuel
    Peiro, Teresa
    Cano, Ana
    Molina, Beatriz
    Sousa, Diego
    PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, 2020, 24 (04)
  • [7] Post-transplant outcome in patients bridged to transplant with temporary mechanical circulatory support devices
    Yin, Michael Yaoyao
    Wever-Pinzon, Omar
    Mehra, Mandeep R.
    Selzman, Craig H.
    Toll, Alice E.
    Cherikh, Wida S.
    Nativi-Nicolau, Jose
    Fang, James C.
    Kfoury, Abdallah G.
    Gilbert, Edward M.
    Kemeyou, Line
    McKellar, Stephen H.
    Koliopoulou, Antigone
    Vaduganathan, Muthiah
    Drakos, Stavros G.
    Stehlik, Josef
    JOURNAL OF HEART AND LUNG TRANSPLANTATION, 2019, 38 (08) : 858 - 869
  • [8] Heart Transplantation and Mechanical Circulatory Support in Adults with Congenital Heart Disease
    Serfas, John D.
    Patel, Priyesh A.
    Krasuski, Richard A.
    CURRENT CARDIOLOGY REPORTS, 2018, 20 (10)
  • [9] MILESTONE: More Than 1,200 Children Bridged to Heart Transplantation with Mechanical Circulatory Support
    Thangappan, Karthik
    Zafar, Farhan
    Lorts, Angela
    Adachi, Iki
    Rosenthal, David
    Rossano, Joseph
    Maeda, Katsuhide
    Morales, David L. S.
    ASAIO JOURNAL, 2022, 68 (04) : 577 - 583
  • [10] Mechanical circulatory support after heart transplantation
    Mihaljevic, Tomislav
    Jarrett, Craig M.
    Gonzalez-Stawinski, Gonzalo
    Smedira, Nicholas G.
    Nowicki, Edward R.
    Thuita, Lucy
    Mountis, Maria
    Blackstone, Eugene H.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CARDIO-THORACIC SURGERY, 2012, 41 (01) : 200 - 206