Abstract

Prior studies indicate donor age-recipient age (DA-RA) difference may be of prognostic value in adolescents, although not adults. We aim to analyze the relationship between DA-RA difference and long-term survival of young adult heart transplantation (HTx) recipients. First-time, single-organ HTx recipients aged 18-30 who underwent HTx between 2010 and 2020 were analyzed from the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) registry. Four cohorts were created based on DA-RA difference. The primary outcome was 5 year post-HTx survival. Secondary outcome was post-HTx complications. One thousand eight hundred three donor-recipient pairs were divided into four groups: DA-RA < 0, 0 ≤ DA-RA < 10, 10 ≤ DA-RA < 20, and DA-RA ≥ 20 with 682 (37.8%), 651 (36.1%), 356 (19.7%), 114 (6.3%) pairs in each cohort, respectively. The estimated 5 year survival of the DA-RA ≥ 20 cohort was 66.5% compared to the other three groups at ~75%. After adjustment, DA-RA ≥ 20 was independently associated with worse survival compared to DA-RA < 0 (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] = 1.55; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.06-2.27; log-rank p = 0.008). There was no significant difference in complication incidence across cohorts. Among young adults, accepting a donor heart more than 20 years older than the recipient was associated with worse 5 year survival. We did not detect a significant difference up to 20 years. This information may help guide appropriate donor selection in the young adult population.

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