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Impact of Ischaemic and Dilated Cardiomyopathy on Short-Term and Long-Term Survival After Ventricular Assist Device Implantation: A Single-Centre Experience

Authors :
Ivanov, Borko
Djordjevic, Ilija
Sabashnikov, Anton
Sindhu, Dirk
Hink, Stephan
Eghbalzadeh, Kaveh
Gerfer, Stephen
Gaisendrees, Christopher
Schlachtenberger, Georg
Rustenbach, Christian
Seuthe, Katharina
Regnier, Kuhn
Mader, Navid
Pfister, Roman
Zeriouh, Mohamed
Rahmanian, Parwis
Wahlers, Thorsten
Ivanov, Borko
Djordjevic, Ilija
Sabashnikov, Anton
Sindhu, Dirk
Hink, Stephan
Eghbalzadeh, Kaveh
Gerfer, Stephen
Gaisendrees, Christopher
Schlachtenberger, Georg
Rustenbach, Christian
Seuthe, Katharina
Regnier, Kuhn
Mader, Navid
Pfister, Roman
Zeriouh, Mohamed
Rahmanian, Parwis
Wahlers, Thorsten
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Prognosis of patients with end-stage heart failure is known to be impacted by the aetiology of heart failure (HF). Ischaemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) are the most frequent pa-thologies necessitating ventricular assist device (VAD) support in these patients. However, the specific impact of ICM and DCM in clinical outcomes after VAD implantation remains unclear. Therefore, this study aimed to analyse clinical differences in ICM and DCM patients after LVAD surgery from the current institution. Methods All consecutive patients from the LVAD centre were included in this retrospective study. To analyse specific differences in in-hospital outcomes, patients were divided into two groups: ICM and DCM. Long -term follow-up was calculated by Kaplan-Meier estimation of survival. Results Between January 2010 and July 2020, 60 consecutive patients underwent LVAD implantation at the insti-tution: 36 patients (60%) were supported due to end-stage ICM and 24 patients (40%) in regard of therapy-refractory DCM. Baseline characteristics showed no between-group differences. The ICM patients showed a clear trend to higher amount of additional cardiac procedures during VAD surgery (36% ICM vs 12% DCM; p=0.052). In-hospital mortality was comparable between ICM and DCM patients (36% ICM vs 21% DCM; p=0.206). A trend towards higher frequency of pump thrombosis was seen in DCM patients (p=0.080). Long-term survival was comparable between the groups. Conclusion The aetiology of heart failure did not impact short-term or long-term clinical outcomes after VAD surgery. Multicentre registry data are necessary to substantiate these findings.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1383742157
Document Type :
Electronic Resource