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Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 291-298 (March 2010)


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Interactions among donor characteristics influence post-transplant survival: A multi-institutional analysis

Josef Stehlik, MD, MPHaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, David S. Feldman, MD, PhDb, Robert N. Brown, MSc, Adrian B. VanBakel, MDd, Stewart D. Russel, MDe, Gregory A. Ewald, MDf, Mary E. Hagan, ANPa, Jan Folsoma, James K. Kirklin, MDc, Cardiac Transplant Research Database Group

published online 05 October 2009.

Background

Quantification of donor-associated risk in a specific heart transplant recipient is often difficult. Our aim was to identify donor characteristics that affect survival in the contemporary era.

Methods

Between 1990 and 2006, 7,322 patients from 32 centers in the Cardiac Transplant Research Database underwent heart transplantation. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to identify donor-associated risk predictors and important interactions between these donor characteristics. Recipient survival was examined using parametric regression analysis in the hazard function domain.

Results

Donor characteristics associated with post-transplant death included donor age, donor requirement for vasoactive therapy, positive donor cytomegalovirus serology, longer graft ischemic time, and lower donor body weight. Several interactions between individual donor characteristics affected survival. In male donors, history of hypertension and diabetes mellitus were risk factors for death (p = 0.006, p = 0.04, respectively), but not in female donors (p = 0.5, p = 0.8, respectively). There was a significant interaction between donor age and recipient-donor weight difference. If the donor was of younger age, increasing recipient-donor weight difference did not result in increased death. With increasing donor age, weight difference did result in compromised survival (p < 0.0003). Donor and recipient gender further modified the degree of risk: risk was higher in female donors and when recipients were male (p < 0.0003).

Conclusions

This multi-institutional analysis identified important interactions between donor characteristics that affect post-transplant survival that explain some of the discrepancies in the results of previous studies. The results are likely to aid in efficient organ allocation.

a Utah Transplant Affiliated Hospitals (U.T.A.H.) Cardiac Transplant Program, Salt Lake City, Utah

b Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

c University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama

d Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina

e Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

f Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Josef Stehlik, MD, MPH, University of Utah Health Sciences, VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Intermountain Medical Center, Cardiology Section (111CT)/Heart Failure and Transplant Office, 50 N Medical Dr, 4A100 SOM, Salt Lake City, UT 84132. Telephone: 801-581-7715. Fax: 801-584-2532

PII: S1053-2498(09)00633-0

doi:10.1016/j.healun.2009.08.007


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