Publications by authors named "Tina Allain-Rooney"

Background: Retransplantation is rare and associated with worse survival and more morbidity. The study aim is to describe an updated cohort of pediatric retransplants, determine if there has been an era effect on outcomes, and understand if identified trends are explained by changes in patient selection.

Methods: Pediatric Heart Transplant Society database analysis of retransplantation patients <18 years of age (Era 1: 1993-2001, Era 2: 2002-2010, Era 3: 2011-2018).

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Cardiac remodeling is associated with plasma biomarkers of fibrinogenesis, inflammation, and oxidative stress, and upregulation of mitogenic, pro-fibrotic, and apoptotic signaling pathways. Our primary objective was to evaluate biomarker and subcellular myocardial changes in pediatric heart transplant recipients. Fifty-two-week prospective, randomized (tacrolimus, Tac, vs.

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Organ availability and acceptability limit pediatric HTx. What characteristics define an unacceptable or high-risk pediatric donor remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to characterize a large cohort of pediatric donors and determine the donor risk factors, including cumulative risk, that affect recipient survival.

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Background: Dilated (DCM), restrictive (RCM), and hypertrophic (HCM) cardiomyopathies (CM) in children have varying clinical courses and therapeutic options. Heart transplantation (HTx) offers a chance for long-term survival; but outcomes after listing have not been well defined.

Methods: A multi-institutional registry of 3,147 patients listed for HTx (January 1993-December 2006) was used to compare outcomes of 1,320 children with CM (42%) and 1,827 with non-CM (58%) etiologies.

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Minimal data exist on the perioperative use of TG for induction in pediatric HTx recipients. We report our experience using continuous infusion of TG on (i) perioperative adverse events, (ii) rejection, (iii) CAV, and (iv) PTLD. TG was infused via peripheral intravenous intra- and perioperatively as a continuous infusion (24 h/day).

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