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Transplantation Outcomes with Donor Hearts after Circulatory Death.

Authors :
Schroder JN
Patel CB
DeVore AD
Bryner BS
Casalinova S
Shah A
Smith JW
Fiedler AG
Daneshmand M
Silvestry S
Geirsson A
Pretorius V
Joyce DL
Um JY
Esmailian F
Takeda K
Mudy K
Shudo Y
Salerno CT
Pham SM
Goldstein DJ
Philpott J
Dunning J
Lozonschi L
Couper GS
Mallidi HR
Givertz MM
Pham DT
Shaffer AW
Kai M
Quader MA
Absi T
Attia TS
Shukrallah B
Sun BC
Farr M
Mehra MR
Madsen JC
Milano CA
D'Alessandro DA
Source :
The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] 2023 Jun 08; Vol. 388 (23), pp. 2121-2131.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Data showing the efficacy and safety of the transplantation of hearts obtained from donors after circulatory death as compared with hearts obtained from donors after brain death are limited.<br />Methods: We conducted a randomized, noninferiority trial in which adult candidates for heart transplantation were assigned in a 3:1 ratio to receive a heart after the circulatory death of the donor or a heart from a donor after brain death if that heart was available first (circulatory-death group) or to receive only a heart that had been preserved with the use of traditional cold storage after the brain death of the donor (brain-death group). The primary end point was the risk-adjusted survival at 6 months in the as-treated circulatory-death group as compared with the brain-death group. The primary safety end point was serious adverse events associated with the heart graft at 30 days after transplantation.<br />Results: A total of 180 patients underwent transplantation; 90 (assigned to the circulatory-death group) received a heart donated after circulatory death and 90 (regardless of group assignment) received a heart donated after brain death. A total of 166 transplant recipients were included in the as-treated primary analysis (80 who received a heart from a circulatory-death donor and 86 who received a heart from a brain-death donor). The risk-adjusted 6-month survival in the as-treated population was 94% (95% confidence interval [CI], 88 to 99) among recipients of a heart from a circulatory-death donor, as compared with 90% (95% CI, 84 to 97) among recipients of a heart from a brain-death donor (least-squares mean difference, -3 percentage points; 90% CI, -10 to 3; P<0.001 for noninferiority [margin, 20 percentage points]). There were no substantial between-group differences in the mean per-patient number of serious adverse events associated with the heart graft at 30 days after transplantation.<br />Conclusions: In this trial, risk-adjusted survival at 6 months after transplantation with a donor heart that had been reanimated and assessed with the use of extracorporeal nonischemic perfusion after circulatory death was not inferior to that after standard-care transplantation with a donor heart that had been preserved with the use of cold storage after brain death. (Funded by TransMedics; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03831048.).<br /> (Copyright © 2023 Massachusetts Medical Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1533-4406
Volume :
388
Issue :
23
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37285526
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2212438