Abstract

Heart transplantation is limited by the scarcity of suitable donors. Patients with advanced biventricular failure may require biventricular support to provide optimal cardiac output and end-organ perfusion. We highlight the outcomes of using the HeartWare HVAD System (HVAD) in a biventricular configuration. This retrospective study included patients implanted with HVAD as a biventricular assist device (BiVAD) between 2009 and 2017 at 12 participating centers. When used as a right ventricular assist device (VAD) (RVAD), the HVAD can be attached to the right ventricle (RV) or the right atrium (RA). Kaplan-Meier survival estimates were calculated comparing the 2 RVAD implant locations. Comparisons were also made between the timing of RVAD implantation (primary vs staged) on adverse event (AE) profiles and survival. Among the 93 patients who were implanted with a HVAD BiVAD, Kaplan-Meier survivals at 1-year and 2-year were 56% and 47%, respectively. Survival was independent of the location of the HVAD RVAD implant or whether there was an interval between left VAD and RVAD implantation. The most common AEs were bleeding (35.5%), infection (25.8%), and respiratory failure (20.4%). This study illustrated similar survival in patients receiving a primary or staged HVAD BiVAD implant at 1 year and 2 years. This study also established that the locations of the RVAD implant (RV or RA) result in similar AE profiles.

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