Evolution of heart transplant donor characteristics in the 21st century: A United States single center's experience

Despite a record setting number of heart transplants performed annually, the national donor shortage continues to plague transplant teams across the United States. Here we describe the barriers to adaptation of numerous "non-traditional" orthotopic heart transplant donor characteristics in...

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Veröffentlicht in:World journal of transplantation 2024-09, Vol.14 (3), p.92721
Hauptverfasser: Spring, Alexander M, Gjelaj, Christiana, Madan, Shivank, Patel, Snehal R, Saeed, Omar, Murthy, Sandhya, Rochlani, Yogita, Sims, Daniel B, Vukelic, Sasha, est, Stephen J, Borgi, Jamil F, Goldstein, Daniel J, Jorde, Ulrich P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite a record setting number of heart transplants performed annually, the national donor shortage continues to plague transplant teams across the United States. Here we describe the barriers to adaptation of numerous "non-traditional" orthotopic heart transplant donor characteristics including donors with hepatitis C virus, those meeting criteria for donation after cardiac death, donors with coronavirus disease 19 infection, donors with the human immunodeficiency virus, and grafts with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Our center's objective was to increase our transplant volume by expanding our donor pool from "traditional" donors to these "non-traditional" donors. We detail how medical advances such as certain laboratory studies, pharmacologic interventions, and organ care systems have allowed our center to expand the donor pool thereby increasing transplantation volume without adverse effects on outcomes.Despite a record setting number of heart transplants performed annually, the national donor shortage continues to plague transplant teams across the United States. Here we describe the barriers to adaptation of numerous "non-traditional" orthotopic heart transplant donor characteristics including donors with hepatitis C virus, those meeting criteria for donation after cardiac death, donors with coronavirus disease 19 infection, donors with the human immunodeficiency virus, and grafts with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Our center's objective was to increase our transplant volume by expanding our donor pool from "traditional" donors to these "non-traditional" donors. We detail how medical advances such as certain laboratory studies, pharmacologic interventions, and organ care systems have allowed our center to expand the donor pool thereby increasing transplantation volume without adverse effects on outcomes.
ISSN:2220-3230
2220-3230
DOI:10.5500/wjt.v14.i3.92721