Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine (V.K.T., K.J.C., J.A.F., J.G., J.R., S.H.L., F.L., M.H., M.A.F., G.S., N.U.), Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY.
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY (E.H., G.S., N.U.).
Circ Heart Fail. 2021 Jun;14(6):e007916. doi: 10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.120.007916. Epub 2021 May 28.
One of the goals of the revised 6-tiered US adult heart allocation policy was to improve risk stratification of patients to lower exception status utilization for transplant listing. We sought to define the characteristics and outcomes of waitlisted patients using exception status and to examine region- and center-level differences in utilization of exception status in the new heart allocation system.
This retrospective cohort analysis of the United Network for Organ Sharing database included adult waitlisted patients for heart transplant between October 18, 2018, and June 30, 2020, in the United States, stratified by use of exception status versus standard criteria.
Out of 6351 patients, 1907 (30.0%) were waitlisted under exception status. Patients using exception status were more likely to have a nonischemic cause of heart failure, blood type O, United Network for Organ Sharing status 2 at listing and were less likely to have a durable left ventricular assist device at listing. Exception status utilization varied significantly between and within United Network for Organ Sharing regions. Listing by exception criteria was associated with a significantly higher incidence of heart transplantation compared with listing by standard criteria (hazard ratio, 1.25 [1.15-1.38], <0.001), without increased risk of death or delisting for worsening clinical status (hazard ratio, 0.83 [0.65-1.05], =0.12) after multivariable adjustment.
The status tiers of the new heart allocation system may not fully capture medical urgency and complexity of waitlisted patients as assessed by transplant physicians and review committees and may limit the ability to develop a heart allocation score.
修订后的美国成人心脏分配政策的目标之一是改善患者的风险分层,以降低移植名单中例外状态的利用。我们旨在定义使用例外状态的候补患者的特征和结果,并检查新心脏分配系统中例外状态利用的区域和中心水平差异。
本研究回顾性分析了美国器官共享联合网络数据库中 2018 年 10 月 18 日至 2020 年 6 月 30 日期间接受心脏移植的成年候补患者,按使用例外状态与标准标准分层。
在 6351 名患者中,有 1907 名(30.0%)是例外状态下的候补患者。使用例外状态的患者更有可能因非缺血性心力衰竭、血型 O、列出时的器官共享网络状态 2 而等待,列出时不太可能有耐用的左心室辅助设备。例外状态的使用在器官共享网络区域之间和内部差异显著。与按标准标准列出相比,按例外标准列出与心脏移植的发生率显著增加(风险比,1.25[1.15-1.38],<0.001),在多变量调整后,因临床状况恶化而死亡或除名的风险没有增加(风险比,0.83[0.65-1.05],=0.12)。
新心脏分配系统的状态等级可能无法完全捕捉到移植医生和审查委员会评估的候补患者的医疗紧迫性和复杂性,并且可能限制开发心脏分配评分的能力。