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Outcomes of Donation After Circulatory Death Heart Transplantation in Australia
Authors:Hong Chee Chew  Arjun Iyer  Mark Connellan  Sarah Scheuer  Jeanette Villanueva  Ling Gao  Mark Hicks  Michelle Harkness  Claudio Soto  Andrew Dinale  Priya Nair  Alasdair Watson  Emily Granger  Paul Jansz  Kavitha Muthiah  Andrew Jabbour  Eugene Kotlyar  Anne Keogh  Kumud Dhital
Institution:1. St. Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;2. Cardiac Transplant Laboratory, Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;3. St. Vincent’s Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract:

Background

Transplantation of hearts retrieved from donation after circulatory death (DCD) donors is an evolving clinical practice.

Objectives

The purpose of this study is to provide an update on the authors’ Australian clinical program and discuss lessons learned since performing the world’s first series of distantly procured DCD heart transplants.

Methods

The authors report their experience of 23 DCD heart transplants from 45 DCD donor referrals since 2014. Donor details were collected using electronic donor records (Donate Life, Australia) and all recipient details were collected from clinical notes and electronic databases at St. Vincent’s Hospital.

Results

Hearts were retrieved from 33 of 45 DCD donors. A total of 12 donors did not progress to circulatory arrest within the pre-specified timeframe. Eight hearts failed to meet viability criteria during normothermic machine perfusion, and 2 hearts were declined due to machine malfunction. A total of 23 hearts were transplanted between July 2014 and April 2018. All recipients had successful implantation, with mechanical circulatory support utilized in 9 cases. One case requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation subsequently died on the sixth post-operative day, representing a mortality of 4.4% over 4 years with a total follow-up period of 15,500 days for the entire cohort. All surviving recipients had normal cardiac function on echocardiogram and no evidence of acute rejection on discharge. All surviving patients remain in New York Heart Association functional class I with normal biventricular function.

Conclusions

DCD heart transplant outcomes are excellent. Despite a higher requirement for mechanical circulatory support for delayed graft function, primarily in recipients with ventricular assist device support, overall survival and rejection episodes are comparable to outcomes from contemporary brain-dead donors.
Keywords:DCD  ECMO  heart failure  heart transplant  OCS  outcomes  DBD  donation after brain death  DCD  donation after circulatory death  EMBx  endomyocardial biopsy  ICU  intensive care unit  NMP  normothermic machine perfusion  OCS  Organ Care System  WIT  warm ischemic time  WLS  withdrawal from life support
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