1. Pediatric heart transplant waiting times in the United States since the 2016 allocation policy change.
- Author
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Williams RJ, Lu M, Sleeper LA, Blume ED, Esteso P, Fynn-Thompson F, Vanderpluym CJ, Urbach S, and Daly KP
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Policy, Tissue Donors, United States, Waiting Lists, Heart Defects, Congenital, Heart Transplantation, Tissue and Organ Procurement
- Abstract
We describe waiting times for pediatric heart transplant (HT) candidates after the 2016 revision to the US allocation policy. The OPTN database was queried for pediatric HT candidates listed between 7/2016 and 4/2019. Of the 1789 included candidates, 65% underwent HT, 14% died/deteriorated, 8% were removed for improvement, and 13% were still waiting at the end of follow-up. Most candidates were status 1A at HT (81%). Median wait times differ substantially by listing status, blood type, and recipient weight. The likelihood of HT was lower in candidates <25 kg and in those with blood type O; The <25 kg, blood type O subgroup experiences longer wait times and higher wait list mortality. For status 1A candidates, median wait times were 108 days (≤25 kg, blood type O), 80 days (≤25 kg, non-O), 47 days (>25 kg, O), and 24 days (>25 kg, non-O). We found that centers with more selective organ acceptance practices, based on a lower median Pediatric Heart Donor Assessment Tool (PH-DAT) score for completed transplants, experience longer status 1A wait times for their listed patients. These data can be used to counsel families and to select appropriate advanced heart failure therapies to support patients to transplant., (© 2022 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.)
- Published
- 2022
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