Background: Intentional blood group (BG)-incompatible (ABOi) heart transplantation in childhood is emerging in many centers. Safety limits remain undetermined. In this multicenter study we have compiled experience on clinical and immunologic boundaries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: As infant and pediatric heart transplantation becomes more common, there is a growing need to better understand the causes of failure or death, if we are to continue to improve the outcome in these children.
Methods: A multidisciplinary team reviewed all deaths occurring in the cohort of infants and children transplanted during the first 20 years of the Loma Linda Pediatric Heart Transplant program, with 2 additional years of follow-up beyond the 20-year accrual period, and classified them as to cause.
Results: There were 169 deaths among 421 recipients, with a median follow-up of 9.
At Loma Linda University Children's Hospital, the medical information of 405 pediatric patients who received orthotopic cardiac transplantation were reviewed. Of those who died (n=136), 86% (n=117) underwent postmortem examinations, and the brain was examined in 61% (n=82, male=39). The number and type of intracranial lesions present were compiled, and these were matched to underlying functional cardiac disease categories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There are few published data regarding the long-term outcome of "large" cardiac allografts in children. This study examines the effect of cardiac graft oversizing on the survival of pediatric patients with congenital heart disease (CHD).
Methods: Two hundred ninety-one children, age 1 day to 17 years (median 50 days), with CHD underwent primary cardiac transplantation between 1985 and 2002.
Seizures are common in infants undergoing cardiac transplant and are usually attributed to a non-specific "post-pump" phenomenon. In this study, we determined which variables were associated with the occurrence of post-transplant seizures in infants with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and the need for continued treatment with antiepileptic medication. Of 127 infants studied over an 11-year period, 27 (21%), ages 9 to 90 days, had post-transplant seizures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA retrospective analysis of 381 pediatric heart-transplant recipients was performed to determine the frequency, characteristics, and risk factors for post-transplant diabetes. The rate of post-transplant diabetes was 1.8% with antithymocyte globulin, cyclosporine and azathioprine as primary immunosuppressive therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Utilizing donor hearts with prolonged graft ischemia may extend the donor pool.
Methods And Results: The medical records of 363 infants and children, aged 1 day to 17 years, transplanted at Loma Linda University between November 1985 and March 2001, were retrospectively reviewed. Fourteen children received organs with prolonged ischemic times (>8 hours)(PIT) compared with 14 with short ischemic times (< or =90 minutes)(SIT).
Surgical mortality is high in children with visceral heterotaxy (VH), particularly if atrioventricular valve insufficiency, ventricular dysfunction, or aortic atresia is present. This study reviews the outcome of cardiac transplantation (CT) in infants and children with VH and congenital heart disease who are at high risk for standard palliative or corrective surgery. We reviewed CT outcomes in 29 children with VH, congenital heart disease, atrioventricular valve insufficiency, ventricular dysfunction, and/or aortic atresia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF