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Consequences of Patient Denial at First Exemption Request for Cardiac Transplantation [Letter]
Alam, A; Golob, S; Patel, S; Fatma, N; Segev, D; Massie, A; Moussa, M; Flattery, E; Phillips, K; Wayda, B; Katz, J N; Stewart, D; Gentry, S; Goldberg, R I; Rao, S; Reyentovich, A; Moazami, N
PMID: 40691956
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5901342
Cardiac Xenotransplantation: Current State and Future Directions
Phillips, Katherine G; Aljabban, Imad; Wolbrom, Daniel H; Griesemer, Adam; Leacche, Marzia; McGregor, Christopher; Moazami, Nader
The increasing demand for donor hearts presents both a critical challenge and a significant opportunity for innovation in cardiac transplantation. Advancements in immunosuppressive regimens and genetic engineering have reignited recent interest in xenotransplantation. Notably, 2 human patients have received genetically modified pig hearts under expanded-access authorization. They survived for 40 and 60 days, with xenograft failure preceding death in both cases. Concurrently, decedent studies have focused on monitoring the short-term physiological function of genetically modified cardiac xenografts in legally brain-dead recipients, representing a novel experimental paradigm for preclinical testing to help bridge the gap between nonhuman primate studies and clinical trials. These contemporary achievements build on a large body of exploratory efforts in cardiac xenotransplantation in nonhuman primates. Despite significant progress in overcoming hyperacute rejection, adaptive cellular and humoral immunological barriers remain. This review aims to critically evaluate the current advancements in xenotransplantation, to explore ongoing challenges, and to discuss the future potential of this innovative approach in addressing the growing demand for donor organs in cardiac transplantation.
PMID: 40623074
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 5890472
DCD heart transplantation with NRP: Excellent results and a continued uphill battle [Editorial]
Reyentovich, Alex; Leacche, Marzia; Moazami, Nader
PMID: 40578717
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5906402
Barriers and Opportunities in Donation after Circulatory Death Heart Transplantation
Phillips, Katherine G; Stewart, Darren; Wayda, Brian; Drozdowicz, Kelly; Trager, Lena; Reyentovich, Alex; Leacche, Marzia; Alam, Amit; Moazami, Nader
BACKGROUND:Heart utilization from donation after circulatory death (DCD) donors remains highly variable across the United States, potentially resulting in missed transplantation opportunities. This study aimed to quantify the frequency of clinically viable, non-utilized DCD hearts and identify usage barriers. METHODS:We conducted a retrospective, national registry analysis of donors ≤55 years old who donated ≥1 organ, focusing primarily on DCDs. Donor characteristics, particularly age, warm ischemic time (WIT), and EF, as well as reasons for non-recovery and offer refusal, were analyzed. SRTR's heart yield model was employed to identify non-utilized DCD hearts clinically comparable to transplanted DCD hearts. RESULTS:In 2023, 613 DCD hearts were transplanted, accounting for 13.5% of all heart transplants. Only 15.5% of DCD hearts from donors ≤55 years old were utilized. Marked variation in risk-adjusted DCD heart yield was observed between states, OPOs, and Regions. Donors of transplanted DCD hearts had a median age of 32, WIT 24 minutes, and EF 63%. The yield model identified between 701-1,243 non-utilized DCD hearts with characteristics comparable to transplanted cases. Concerns about delayed progression to circulatory arrest after life support withdrawal was a key reason for non-utilization. CONCLUSIONS:Despite wider acceptance of DCD heart transplantation, an increasing proportion of DCD hearts remain unused despite favorable characteristics. Concerns related to delayed progression to circulatory arrest are a significant barrier to heart utilization. Addressing geographic variability and improving predictive models for donor viability could double DCD heart utilization and expand heart transplantation volume by approximately 700-1,200 (15-27%) annually.
PMID: 40480320
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5862872
Outcomes after DCD Cardiac Transplantation: An international, multicenter retrospective study
Louca, John O; Öchsner, Marco; Bhagra, Sai; Shah, Ashish; Schlendorf, Kelly; Lima, Brian; Wang, Chen Chia; Siddiqi, Hasan; Irshad, Ali; Schroder, Jacob; Casalinova, Sarah; Milano, Carmelo; Khush, Kiran; Skoda, Anette; Luikart, Helen; Ashley, Euan; Moazami, Nader; James, Les; Dar, Owais; Konicoff, Mailen; Urban, Marian; Um, John; Castleberry, Anthony; Hoffman, Jordan R H; Park, Sarah Y; Cain, Michael T; Fetten, Katharina; Meyer, Dan; Xu, Addison; Gonzalez-Vilchez, Francisco; DomÃnguez-Gil, Beatriz; Royo-Villanova, Mario; Garrido, Iris; Brouckaert, Janne; Rega, Filip; Tchana-Sato, Vincent; Berman, Marius; Bae, James; Sinha, Sanjay; Pettit, Stephen; Messer, Simon; Large, Stephen; ,
BACKGROUND:As donation after circulatory determination of death (DCD) heart transplantation (HT) becomes more widely adopted, there is a need to establish the most clinically effective method of organ procurement. OBJECTIVE:This international, multicenter study compares outcomes of DCD-HT across Europe and the United States (US) between recipients whose donor hearts were retrieved using thoraco-abdominal normothermic regional perfusion (taNRP) to those whose hearts were recovered using direct procurement and perfusion (DPP). METHODS:This was a retrospective observational study across 20 heart transplant centers in Belgium, Spain, the United Kingdom (UK) and the US. This study included all patients undergoing DCD-HT at participating centers, from the start of each center's DCD program through 01/01/2023. DCD-HT with recovery using either taNRP or DPP were compared to one-another. Post-transplant outcomes included (i)survival at 1-year, (ii)incidence of severe primary graft dysfunction (PGD), (iii)episodes of treated, biopsy-proven acute-cellular rejection (ACR) in the first year following transplantation. RESULTS:504 DCD-HT took place in the study period. Survival at one year was similar for taNRP and DPP recipients (91% vs 88%, p=0.1). taNRP recipients had a lower rate of severe PGD (7.6% vs 19.2%, p<0.001) and fewer episodes of biopsy-proven, ACR requiring treatment in the first-year post-transplantation (13% vs 25%,p<0.001). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:In an international study of DCD-HT, recipients of hearts retrieved by taNRP technique had lower rates of severe PGD and fewer episodes of biopsy-proven ACR in the first year when compared with those retrieved utilizing DPP. These results should be further investigated with randomized control trials.
PMID: 40293864
ISSN: 2213-1787
CID: 5833172
Spinal Cord Infarction as a Complication of VA-ECMO With Microaxial Flow Pump in Cardiogenic Shock [Case Report]
Singh, Arushi; Ali, Syed Zain; Drozdowicz, Kelly A; Alam, Amit; Goldberg, Randal I; Chan, Justin C; Leacche, Marzia; Moazami, Nader; Reyentovich, Alex; Kadosh, Bernard S
CLINICAL CONDITION/UNASSIGNED:The authors present the case of a young man who presented with cardiogenic shock requiring venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and microaxial flow pump complicated by acute spinal cord infarction (SCI) leading to bilateral lower extremity paraplegia. KEY QUESTIONS/UNASSIGNED:The key questions included the following: 1) What is the incidence and pathophysiology for SCI with mechanical circulatory support (MCS)?; 2) Which configurations of MCS carry a greater risk of SCI? How do we approach MCS escalation, recognizing that with each device we carry additive risk of complications?; 3) What data guide anticoagulation strategies for MCS?; and 4) What strategies can we implement to support patients who have suffered SCI from MCS? OUTCOME/RESULTS:Our patient was transitioned to a right ventricular assist device with Impella 5.5 as a bridge to therapy, and underwent cardiac transplantation 4 weeks after presentation with ongoing inpatient rehabilitation. TAKE-HOME MESSAGES/CONCLUSIONS:Contemporary MCS carries a small but significant risk of SCI which is often irreversible. More data are required to guide anticoagulation strategies for MCS and mitigate risk.
PMID: 40185612
ISSN: 2666-0849
CID: 5819472
Recognition of the Large Ambulatory C2D Stage of Advanced Heart Failure-A Call to Action
Dunlay, Shannon M; Pinney, Sean P; Lala, Anuradha; Stewart, Garrick C; McIlvennan, Colleen; Wong, Renee P; Morris, Alanna A; Pagani, Francis D; Allen, Larry A; Breathett, Khadijah; Cogswell, Rebecca; Colvin, Monica M; Cowger, Jennifer A; Drakos, Stavros G; Gelfman, Laura P; Kanwar, Manreet K; Kiernan, Michael S; Kittleson, Michelle M; Lewis, Eldrin F; Moazami, Nader; Ogunniyi, Modele O; Pandey, Ambarish; Rogers, Joseph G; Schumacher, Kurt R; Slaughter, Mark S; Tedford, Ryan J; Teuteberg, Jeffrey; Valantine, Hannah A; DeFilippis, Ersilia M; Dixon, Debra D; Golbus, Jessica R; Gulati, Gaurav; Hanff, Thomas C; Hsiao, Stephanie; Lewsey, Sabra C; McCormick, Amanda D; Nayak, Aditi; Fenton, Kathleen N; Longacre, Lisa Schwartz; Shanbhag, Sujata M; Taddei-Peters, Wendy C; Stevenson, Lynne Warner
IMPORTANCE/UNASSIGNED:The advanced ambulatory heart failure (HF) population comprises patients who have progressed beyond the pillars of recommended stage C HF therapies but can still find meaningful life-years ahead. Although these patients are commonly encountered in practice, national databases selectively capture the small groups accepted for heart transplant listing or left ventricular assist devices. The epidemiology, trajectories, and therapies for other ambulatory patients with advanced HF are poorly understood. OBSERVATIONS/UNASSIGNED:In December 2022, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute convened a team of experts to identify knowledge gaps and research priorities for the ambulatory population with limiting daily symptoms and transition toward refractory end-stage D HF, designated as stage C2D. This article summarizes the findings from that 3-day workshop. Workshop participants surveyed the initial challenges and knowledge gaps for (1) recognition of ambulatory C2D HF, (2) estimation of the magnitude of the affected population and identifiable subpopulations, and (3) physiologic phenotypes, such as low cardiac output, right HF, cardiorenal syndromes, congestive hepatopathy and frailty, which offer distinct targets for existing and emerging therapies. Social drivers of HF and patient preferences for quality/length of survival were highlighted as essential modifiers for personalization of therapies. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE/UNASSIGNED:Ten key points summarized workshop findings, with target cohorts for study proposed as a crucial next step. This workshop summary is intended as a call for action to address knowledge gaps and develop new strategies to improve outcomes in the large ambulatory population with C2D HF.
PMID: 39908057
ISSN: 2380-6591
CID: 5783992
Current Approaches to Optimize Donor Heart for Transplantation
Alam, Amit H; Lee, Candice Y; Kanwar, Manreet K; Moayedi, Yasbanoo; Bernhardt, Alexander M; Takeda, Koji; Pham, Duc Thinh; Salerno, Christopher; Zuckermann, Andreas; D'Alessandro, David; Pretorius, Victor G; Louca, John O; Large, Stephen; Bowles, Dawn E; Silvestry, Scott C; Moazami, Nader
Heart transplantation remains a critical therapy for patients with end-stage heart failure, offering incremental survival and improved quality of life. One of the key components behind the success of heart transplantation is the condition and preservation of the donor heart. In this review, we provide a comprehensive overview of ischemic reperfusion injury, risk factors associated with primary graft dysfunction, current use of various preservation solutions for organ procurement and recent advancements in donor heart procurement technologies. This State-of-the-Art review will explore factors associated with bringing the "ideal" donor heart to the operating room in the contemporary era.
PMID: 39730081
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5767922
Waitlist mortality for patients with cardiac allograft vasculopathy under the 2018 OPTN donor heart allocation system
Kadosh, Bernard S; Patel, Suhani S; Sidhu, Sharnendra K; Massie, Allan B; Golob, Stephanie; Goldberg, Randal I; Reyentovich, Alex; Moazami, Nader
BACKGROUND:In the 2018 Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network donor heart allocation system, patients listed for re-transplantation due to cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) are assigned to Status 4 unless hemodynamic criteria are met. We aim to examine waitlist outcomes of CAV patients among adult heart transplant candidates. METHODS:We examined waitlist mortality stratified by CAV and waitlist status among adult heart transplant candidates using Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients data from 10/1/2018-11/1/2023. We analyzed waitlist mortality using Kaplan-Meier curves and doubly-robust Cox regressions adjusted for age, gender, sex, race, and dialysis. We compared CAV to non-CAV patients by initial waitlist status, first status of interest, and time-dependent status. RESULTS:Of 21,586 listed patients, 368 were listed for CAV. CAV patients were most often listed at Status 4 with lower proportions at Status 3/2/1 compared with non-CAV patients. Status 4 and Status 3 CAV candidates demonstrated higher than expected waitlist mortality compared to non-CAV counterparts (Status 4: HR 0.51, 95% CI 0.31-0.84; p < 0.01; Status 3: HR 0.61, 95% CI 0.23-1.64; p = 0.33) with similar mortality to non-CAV patients in Status 3 and 2, respectively (Status 4: HR 0.80, 95% CI 0.48-1.35; p = 0.4; Status 3: HR 1.07, 95% CI 0.40-2.86; p = 0.89). When stratifying by status tier, CAV waitlist patients ever listed at Status 4 and 3 had a higher probability of death compared to their non-CAV counterparts (Status 4: HR 1.99, 95% CI 1.20-3.31, p < 0.01; Status 3: HR 3.06, 95% CI 1.06-8.87, p = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS:After 2018, CAV patients had a higher risk of waitlist mortality at Status 4 and 3 compared to non-CAV patients. These results suggest that CAV patients are underprioritized in the current allocation system.
PMID: 39603482
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5779982
Outcomes of Donation After Circulatory Death Heart Transplantation Using Normothermic Regional Perfusion
Kumar, Akshay; Alam, Amit; Dorsey, Michael; James, Les; Hussain, Syed; Kadosh, Bernard; Goldberg, Randal; Reyentovich, Alex; Moazami, Nader; Smith, Deane
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:Donation after circulatory death (DCD) with cardiopulmonary bypass for thoracoabdominal normothermic regional perfusion (TA-NRP) has led to increased use of donor hearts. Rejection rates and long-term survival outcomes are not known. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:A single-center retrospective cohort review of patients who underwent DCD heart transplantation from January 2020 to December 2023 was performed. Donor and recipient characteristics, operative characteristics, and posttransplantation outcomes were analyzed. Subgroup analysis comparing co-localized vs distant donors and recipients was performed. The primary end point was 1-year survival. Secondary end points included incidences of primary graft dysfunction (PGD), cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV), rejection rate, and overall mortality. Our TA-NRP protocol has remained the same, consisting of sternotomy, ligation of aortic arch vessels, establishment of cardiopulmonary bypass, reintubation, resuscitation of the heart, and cold static storage during transport. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:< .005) ischemia times, without any other differences. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Outcomes after DCD heart transplantation using TA-NRP remain encouraging with acceptable rates of rejection, PGD, CAV, and survival at 1 year.
PMCID:11910781
PMID: 40098871
ISSN: 2772-9931
CID: 5813192