Varr Brandon C, Restaino Susan W, Farr Maryjane, Scully Brian, Colombo Paolo C, Naka Yoshifumi, Mancini Donna M
Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
J Heart Lung Transplant. 2016 Sep;35(9):1116-23. doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2016.04.016. Epub 2016 May 11.
Mechanical circulatory support (MCS) is increasingly used as a bridge to heart transplantation. It is not known whether patients who receive MCS as bridge to transplantation (BTT) have more frequent and severe infectious complications in the first transplant year.
Using a retrospective cohort in a single large transplant center from 2009 to 2014, we compared rates of post-transplant infections among patients bridged to transplantation with medical therapy (n = 134) or MCS (n = 178) over the first post-transplant year. Serious infections necessitated >14 days of continuous intravenous antibiotic therapy.
Pre-transplant device infections were common in the MCS group (32.6%). The proportion of patients with any infection (74.2% vs 60.5%; p = 0.01, relative risk 1.23 [1.04 to 1.44]) or serious infections (45.5% vs 31.3%; p = 0.01, relative risk 1.45 [1.08 to 1.96]) in the first post-transplant year was significantly higher in the MCS group than in the medical therapy group, respectively. MCS patients but not medical therapy patients had significantly higher 1-year all-cause mortality in the presence of post-operative infections (16.7% vs 4.3%, p = 0.04). Device-related infections occurred in 67 (37.6%) MCS patients up to 337 days post-transplant, including 26 (14.6%) patients without a known or active pre-operative device infection. In multivariable analyses, age, intensive care unit length of stay, presence of pre-transplant device infection and use of an anti-thymocyte agent were associated with increased rates of infection.
More infectious complications are experienced by patients who receive MCS as BTT, with a significant occurrence of device-related infections. MCS patients with post-transplant infections have higher mortality at 1 year compared with uninfected MCS patients.
机械循环支持(MCS)越来越多地被用作心脏移植的桥梁。目前尚不清楚接受MCS作为移植桥梁(BTT)的患者在移植后的第一年是否有更频繁和严重的感染并发症。
利用2009年至2014年在一个大型单一移植中心的回顾性队列研究,我们比较了在移植后的第一年中,接受药物治疗作为移植桥梁的患者(n = 134)和接受MCS作为移植桥梁的患者(n = 178)的移植后感染率。严重感染需要连续静脉注射抗生素治疗超过14天。
MCS组移植前装置感染很常见(32.6%)。在移植后的第一年,MCS组中发生任何感染的患者比例(74.2%对60.5%;p = 0.01,相对风险1.23 [1.04至1.44])或严重感染的患者比例(45.5%对31.3%;p = 0.01,相对风险1.45 [1.08至1.96])分别显著高于药物治疗组。在发生术后感染的情况下,MCS患者的1年全因死亡率显著高于药物治疗患者(16.7%对4.3%,p = 0.04)。在移植后长达337天的时间里,67例(37.6%)MCS患者发生了与装置相关的感染,其中26例(14.6%)患者术前没有已知的或活动性装置感染。在多变量分析中,年龄、重症监护病房住院时间、移植前装置感染的存在以及抗胸腺细胞药物的使用与感染率增加相关。
接受MCS作为BTT的患者经历了更多的感染并发症,与装置相关的感染发生率显著。与未感染的MCS患者相比,移植后感染的MCS患者1年死亡率更高。