Yaghmour Nisreen, Alramini Dina, Alsarayrah Mohammad, Abuassi Mohammad, Al-Rameni Awn, Aladaileh Mohammad, Al-Abdallat Haneen, Rawashdeh Badi
Department of Cardiology, MercyOne Iowa Heart Center, Des Moines, IO 52302, United States.
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85702, United States.
World J Transplant. 2025 Jun 18;15(2):99992. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v15.i2.99992.
Since being declared as a pandemic on March 11, 2020, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has profoundly influenced heart and lung transplant programs, impacting donor availability, patient management, and healthcare resources. This study offers a citation-based review of the research output on this subject, seeking to understand how the transplant community has responded to these challenges. Through a review of literature from the beginning of the pandemic to early 2023, we evaluate the shifts in academic emphasis and the emerging trends in heart and lung transplantation during the COVID-19 period.
To assess the impact of COVID-19 on heart and lung transplantation research, highlighting key themes, contributions, and trends in the literature during the pandemic.
We conducted an extensive search of the Web of Science database on February 9, 2023. We employed the terms "transplant" and "transplantation", as well as organ-specific terms like "heart", "cardiac", and "lung", combined with COVID-19-related terms such as "COVID-19", "coronavirus", and "SARS-CoV-2". The search encompassed publications from March 11, 2020 to February 9, 2023. Data on authors, journals, countries, institutions, and publication types (articles, reviews, conference papers, letters, notes, editorials, brief surveys, book chapters, and errata) were analyzed. The data was visualized and processed with VOSviewer 1.6.18 and Excel.
We included 847 research items. There were 392 articles (46.3%) and 88 reviews (10.3%). The studies included were referenced 7757 times, with an average of 9.17 citations per article. The majority of the publications ( = 317) were conducted by institutes from the United States with highest citations ( = 4948) on this subject, followed by Germany, Italy, and France. The majority of papers ( = 101) were published in the .
To the fullest extent of our knowledge, this is the first bibliometric study of COVID-19's impact on heart and lung transplantation to offer a visual analysis of the literature in order to predict future frontiers and provide an overview of current research hotspots.
自2020年3月11日被宣布为大流行以来,2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)对心肺移植项目产生了深远影响,影响了供体的可用性、患者管理和医疗资源。本研究对该主题的研究成果进行了基于文献引用的综述,旨在了解移植界如何应对这些挑战。通过回顾从疫情开始到2023年初的文献,我们评估了COVID-19期间心肺移植学术重点的转变和新出现的趋势。
评估COVID-19对心肺移植研究的影响,突出疫情期间文献中的关键主题、贡献和趋势。
我们于2023年2月9日在科学网数据库进行了广泛搜索。我们使用了“移植”和相关术语,以及特定器官的术语,如“心脏”“心脏的”和“肺”,并结合了与COVID-19相关的术语,如“COVID-19”“冠状病毒”和“严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2”。搜索范围涵盖2020年3月11日至2023年2月9日发表的文献。对作者、期刊、国家、机构和出版物类型(文章、综述、会议论文、信函、笔记、社论、简短调查、书籍章节和勘误)的数据进行了分析。使用VOSviewer 1.6.18和Excel对数据进行可视化和处理。
我们纳入了847项研究项目。其中有392篇文章(46.3%)和88篇综述(10.3%)。所纳入的研究被引用7757次,平均每篇文章被引用9.17次。大多数出版物(n = 317)由美国的机构开展,在该主题上的引用次数最多(n = 4948),其次是德国、意大利和法国。大多数论文(n = 101)发表在《 》上。
就我们所知,这是第一项关于COVID-19对心肺移植影响的文献计量学研究,旨在对文献进行可视化分析,以预测未来前沿并概述当前的研究热点。