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High Emergency Lung Transplantation: dramatic decrease of waiting list death rate without relevant higher post‐transplant mortality
Authors:Antoine Roux  Laurence Beaumont‐Azuar  Abdul Monem Hamid  Sandra De Miranda  Dominique Grenet  Guillaume Briend  Pierre Bonnette  Philippe Puyo  François Parquin  Jerome Devaquet  Gregoire Trebbia  Elise Cuquemelle  Benoit Douvry  Clément Picard  Morgan Le Guen  Alain Chapelier  Marc Stern  Edouard Sage  FOCH Lung Transplant Group
Affiliation:1. Pneumology Department, Foch Hospital, Suresnes, France;2. UPRES EA220, Université de Versailles Saint‐Quentin‐en‐Yvelines, Suresnes, France;3. Assistance Publique H?pitaux de Paris, H?pital Européen Georges Pompidou, Service de Pneumologie et Soins Intensifs, Paris, France;4. Thoracic Surgery Department, Foch Hospital, Suresnes, France;5. Thoracic Intensive Care Unit, Foch Hospital, Suresnes, France;6. Intensive Care Unit, Foch Hospital, Suresnes, France;7. Anesthesiology Department, Foch Hospital, Suresnes, France
Abstract:Many candidates for lung transplantation (LT) die on the waiting list, raising the question of graft availability and strategy for organ allocation. We report the experience of the new organ allocation program, “High Emergency Lung Transplantation” (HELT), since its implementation in our center in 2007. Retrospective analysis of 201 lung transplant patients, of whom 37 received HELT from 1st July 2007 to 31th May 2012. HELT candidates had a higher impairment grade on respiratory status and higher Lung Allocation Score (LAS). HELT patients had increased incidence of perioperative complications (e.g., perioperative bleeding) and extracorporeal circulatory assistance (75% vs. 36.6%, P = 0.0005). No significant difference was observed between HELT and non‐HELT patients in mechanical ventilation duration (15.5 days vs. 11 days, P = 0.27), intensive care unit length of stay (15 days vs. 10 days, P = 0.22) or survival rate at 12 (81% vs. 80%), and 24 months post‐LT (72.9% vs. 75.0%). Lastly, mortality on the waiting list was spectacularly reduced from 19% to 2% when compared to the non‐HELT 2004–2007 group. Despite a more severe clinical status of patients on the waiting list, HELT provided similar results to conventional LT. These results were associated with a dramatic reduction in the mortality rate of patients on the waiting list.
Keywords:graft allocation  lung transplantation  mortality on waiting list
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