Abstract
ObjectiveThis study compares the incidence of severe Primary Graft Dysfunction (PGD) in a contemporaneous cohort of donors after circulatory death (DCD) and brain death (DBD) heart transplant recipients. MethodThe United Network for Organ Sharing database was queried for isolated adult heart transplant recipients from 9/2023 to 6/2024. Heart recipients were stratified based on the organ donation type (DCD vs DBD). DCD heart recipients were further categorized based on the procurement method: time between circulatory death to cross-clamp: ≤ 30 minutes (Direct Procurement and Preservation, DPP), >30 minutes (Normothermic Regional Perfusion, NRP). Outcomes of interest included: severe PGD (Left/Bi-Ventricular; LV/BiV) at 24 hours and Severe Graft Dysfunction at 72 hours (patients with severe PGD at 24 hours that remain on mechanical support at 72 hours). ResultsA total of 2,590 adult heart transplant recipients were identified, of which 17.1% underwent DCD heart transplantation. DCD heart recipients were less likely to be on inotrope (36.7% vs 41.6%, p=0.046) and ECMO (4.1% vs 9.9%, p<0.001) prior to transplant than DBD heart recipients. DCD heart recipients were more likely than DBD heart recipients to develop severe PGD (LV/BiV) at 24 hours (9.5% vs 5.1%, p<0.001). The Severe Graft Dysfunction at 72 hours (2.3% vs 2.9%, p=0.67) and 30-day mortality were similar between the 2 groups. Recipients of DCD heart procured with DPP or NRP had similar severe PGD (LV/BiV) at 24 hours (9.4% vs 9.7%, p=0.93). ConclusionSevere PGD at 24 hours is higher among the DCD than DBD heart recipients, but Graft Dysfunction improves by 72 hours.
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