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Impact of cold ischemia time on frequency of airway complications among lung transplant recipients

Authors :
Marian Zembala
Fryderyk Zawadzki
Tomasz Stącel
Marta Wajda-Pokrontka
Anastazja Pandel
Mirosław Nęcki
Maciej Urlik
Remigiusz Antończyk
Magdalena Latos
Martyna Gawęda
Marek Ochman
Piotr Przybyłowski
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background The cold ischemia time (CIT) is a period of time between harvesting an organ for transplant and its reperfusion just after implantation. CIT may have an impact on frequency of complications after lung transplant that can be treated by means of bronchoscopic intervention. The aim of the study was to investigate the correlation between CIT and frequency of bronchoscopic intervention. Methods The retrospective study consists of 91 patients: 22 single lung recipients (24%) and 69 double lung recipients (76%) who underwent lung transplant from March 2012 to June 2019. All statistical analyses were performed in SPSS 25.0 and R 3.5.3. The P levels less than .05 were deemed statistically significant. Results The average CIT in single lung transplant was 5.91 hours, and in double lung transplant it was 8.61 hours. For the 4- to 8-hour CIT the percentages were 80.95% for single lung recipients and 46.38% for double lung recipients. For CIT longer than 8 hours, the following percentages were observed: 9.53% in single lung transplant and 53.62% in double lung transplant. Each subsequent hour of CIT exponentially increases the risk of intervention 1505 times (50.05%). Conclusions Prolonged CIT seems to be a risk factor for airway complication, especially in the double lung recipient group.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ba562a3081f98d84bd91635e5cbb0e3