Abstract

Elevated pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) unresponsive to pharmacological intervention is a major limitation in heart transplantation (HTX). The post-operative course of these patients is associated with an increased risk of life-threatening right heart failure. We evaluated the efficiency of an implantable left ventricular assist device (LVAD) to decrease PVR by unloading the left ventricle and to lower the risk of later orthotopic HTX. Six patients with end-stage heart failure (NYHA class IV) and 'fixed' pulmonary hypertension (PVR 5.7+/-0.7, range 4.4-6.5 Wood units) were analyzed. Despite maximal pharmacological intervention at initial evaluation (oxygen inhalation, nitrates, alprostadil infusion) PVR could not be reduced to under 2.5 Wood units. Four patients received a TCI Heartmate, one patient a Novacor, and one patient a Jarvik 2000. All patients survived the LVAD implantation, four patients could be discharged from hospital. Cardiac index and pulmonary artery pressure values returned to normal during the early post-operative phase. After a mean support time of 191+/-86 days PVR had fallen to 2.0+/-1.2 (range 0.8-3.6) Wood units. All patients could be bridged to transplantation, one patient died 3 months after transplant, five patients are still alive after a mean follow-up of 16.2+/-10.5 months. Mechanical support using an implantable LVAD is a very efficient approach with an acceptable risk to treat severe pulmonary hypertension in end-stage heart failure patients before HTX. Adequate reduction of PVR can be expected within 3-6 months. Subsequent HTX is associated with a good outcome.

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