Abstract

Purpose Certain donor characteristics after heart transplantation (HTx) may have less optimal outcome post-HTx. One factors leading to worse outcome is female donors to male recipient possibly due to size (height and weight) mismatch relative to male donors. We try to compensate for this size mismatch by using obese female donors into male recipients. However, there have been recent concerns with obese donors, in the sense that there are commonly large fat deposits on the donor heart. It is not known whether short and obese female donors (weight oversizing) results in acceptable outcome after HTx. We sought to assess for this possibility in our large single center. Methods Between 2010 and 2017 we assessed 799 HTx patients and divided them into those male recipients who received female donors (n=246) that were short (≤ 66 inches) and obese (BMI≥30) (n=61) and short and non-obese (BMI major adverse cardiac events (NF-MACE: myocardial infarction , new congestive heart failure , percutaneous coronary intervention, implantable cardioverter defibrillator/pacemaker implant, stroke), and freedom from any-treated rejection, acute cellular rejection , and antibody-mediated rejection . Results There is no significant difference in 1-year outcomes between short and obese female donors, short and non-obese female donors, and male donors of similar heights and weights (see tables). Conclusion Short and stout female donors appear to be acceptable for HTx which increases the donor pool.

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