1. Favorable Outcome of an Exclusively Posttransplant Prophylactic Strategy After Heart Transplantation in Recipients With High Immunological Risk
- Author
-
Shaida Varnous, Nicolas Bréchot, Samir Saheb, Mélanie Huot, Adrien Bouglé, Philippe Rouvier, Alain Combes, Virginie D’Orio, Guillaume Lebreton, Julien Amour, Chantal Gautreau, Lisa Belin, Guillaume Coutance, Salima Ouldammar, Xavier Chamillard, and Pascal Leprince
- Subjects
Adult ,Graft Rejection ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Primary Graft Dysfunction ,Risk Assessment ,HLA Antigens ,Isoantibodies ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Progression-free survival ,Retrospective Studies ,Heart transplantation ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Graft Survival ,Immunoglobulins, Intravenous ,Retrospective cohort study ,Plasmapheresis ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,Progression-Free Survival ,Desensitization, Immunologic ,Histocompatibility ,Heart Transplantation ,Female ,Packed red blood cells ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Background Management of the increasing number of sensitized heart transplant candidates has become a recurrent issue. Rather than using pretransplant desensitization therapies, we used a posttransplant prophylactic strategy. Our aim was to describe outcomes in transplant recipients with preformed donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (pfDSA) managed with this strategy. Methods A posttransplant protocol was applied to patients transplanted with pfDSA, consisting of perioperative management of DSA (polyvalent immunoglobulins +/- perioperative plasmapheresis sessions, according to DSA level, as well as induction therapy) and systematic treatment of subsequent antibody-mediated rejection (AMR), even when subclinical. We performed a retrospective analysis of this prospective protocol. The study included all consecutive first recipients of a noncombined heart transplant performed between 2009 and 2015 at our center. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality. Secondary endpoints included primary graft dysfunction, early posttransplant bleeding, rejection, and cardiac allograft vasculopathy-free survival. Results A total of 523 patients were studied, including 88 (17%) and 194 (37%) transplanted with DSA mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of 500 to 1000 and greater than 1000, respectively. The median follow-up period was 4.06 years. Survival was not significantly different between groups. Rejection-free survival was worse in patients with pfDSA MFI >1000, evidenced by a fourfold increase in the risk of antibody-mediated rejection. The incidence of primary graft dysfunction and cardiac allograft vasculopathy-free survival did not significantly differ between groups. Perioperative plasmapheresis increased the risk for transfusion of packed red blood cells. Conclusions This exclusively posttransplant prophylactic strategy achieved favorable outcomes in heart transplant recipients with pfDSA.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF