Cardiac transplantation using extended-donor criteria organs for systemic amyloidosis complicated by heart failure

Mathew S. Maurer, Amresh Raina, Charles Hesdorffer, Rachel Bijou, Paolo Colombo, Mario Deng, Ronald Drusin, Jennifer Haythe, Evelyn Horn, Sun Hi Lee, Charles Marboe, Yoshifumi Naka, Larry Schulman, Brian Scully, Peter Shapiro, Kenneth Prager, Jai Radhakrishnan, Susan Restaino, Donna Mancini

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND. Systemic amyloidosis complicated by heart failure is associated with high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Heart transplantation for patients with systemic amyloidosis is controversial due to recurrence of disease in the transplanted organ or progression of disease in other organs. METHODS. All patients with systemic amyloidosis and heart failure referred for heart transplant evaluation from 1997 to 2004 were included in this retrospective cohort analysis. An interdisciplinary protocol for cardiac transplantation using extended-donor criteria organs, followed in 6 months by either high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation for patients with primary (AL) or by orthotopic liver transplantation for familial (ATTR) amyloidosis, was developed. Survival of the transplanted amyloid cohort was compared to survival of those amyloid patients not transplanted and to patients transplanted for other indications. RESULTS. A total of 25 patients with systemic amyloidosis and heart failure were included in the study; 12 patients received heart transplants. Amyloid heart transplant recipients were more likely female (58% vs. 8%, P=0.02) and had lower serum creatinine (1.3±0.5 vs. 2.0±0.7 mg/dL, P=0.01) than nontransplanted amyloid patients. Survival at 1-year after heart transplant evaluation was higher among transplanted patients (75% vs. 23%) compared to patients not transplanted (P=0.001). Short-term survival posttransplant did not differ between transplanted amyloid patients and contemporaneous standard and extended-donor criteria heart transplant patients (P=0.65). CONCLUSIONS. Cardiac transplantation for amyloid patients with extended-donor criteria organs followed by either stem cell or liver transplantation is associated with improved survival compared to patients not transplanted. Short- to intermediate-term survival is similar to patients receiving heart transplantation for other indications. This clinical management strategy provides cardiac amyloid patients a novel therapeutic option.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)539-545
Number of pages7
JournalTransplantation
Volume83
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2007

Keywords

  • Amyloid
  • Cardiac transplantation
  • Extended donor criteria
  • Stem cell transplantation

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