Summary. Approximately 5000 heart transplants are performed annually in the world. According to the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association/ Heart Failure Society of America (ACC/AHA/HFSA) and the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), there are currently more people on the waiting list for heart transplants than there are donor organs available. The Ukrainian National Waiting List of the Unified State Transplantation Information System contains more than 2,000 patients, of whom about 500 need a heart transplant. Objective. The aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of haemodynamic monitoring using a continuous analysis system for measuring pulse waveform and transpulmonary thermodilution and its impact on orthotopic heart transplantation. Materials and methods. The work is based on the results of 30 recipients diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy who underwent orthotopic heart transplantation. The average age of the recipients was 41.4±3.2 years. There were 90 % of male recipients and 10 % of female recipients. All recipients were diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy with reduced ejection fraction with an average of 18 ± 4.4 %. All patients underwent heart transplantation using PiCCO hemodynamic monitoring, which assessed the optimality of fluid, inotropic and vasopressor therapy with analysis of changes in the functional state of systemic hemodynamic (blood pressure, heart rate, central venous pressure, cardiac index, cardiac output, global end-diastolic volume index, extravascular lung water index, systemic vascular resistance and global ejection fraction) at the time of donor heart inclusion in the recipient’s circulation Results. It was found that all patients had a reduced ejection fraction. In 100% of patients undergoing orthotopic heart transplantation, PiCCO monitoring was used, which showed cardiac dysfunction with a reduced cardiac index of 1.90 ± 0.24 l/min/m on average, global end-diastolic blood volume index was 571 ± 163.7 ml/m2 and was reduced, reflecting a decrease in preload. While the extravascular water index in the lungs averaged 9.2 ± 1.41 ml/kg of body weight and was increased, indicating possible pulmonary oedema at the beginning of surgery. Conclusions. PiCCO monitoring allows real-time diagnosis of functional changes in the myocardium, differentiation of major circulatory disorders in patients with involvement of vital organs and systems, including breathing (gas exchange), classification of haemodynamic disorders and timely correction. During the study, PiCCO monitoring revealed an improvement in extravascular lung water in 95 % of patients by the end of CPR, which made it possible to adequately treat these disorders and prevent pulmonary oedema, provide adequate correction with inotropic support and balance postload with the systemic vascular resistance index and improve the cardiac index by 99.1 %.