INVESTIGADORES
VIGLIANO Carlos
artículos
Título:
Orthotopic heart transplantation in elderly patients: a 10-year experience at a single center.
Autor/es:
FAVALORO RR; DIEZ M; BERTOLOTTI A; GÓMEZ C; FAVALORO LE; ABUD J; NAGEL C; VIGLIANO C; KLEIN F; PERRONE SV
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
Referencias:
Año: 2004 vol. 36 p. 1692 - 1694
ISSN:
0041-1345
Resumen:
INTRODUCTION: A consensus has not yet been reached regarding the indications for orthotopic heart transplantation (OHT) in elderly patients or the age limit contraindicating the procedure. The objective of this study was to assess OHT outcomes to determine whether elderly patients benefit from the procedure. METHODS: From February 1993 to February 2003, 178 OHTs were performed on recipients of mean age 47.4 +/- 15 years (range, 4 to 74) including 80.3% men. The population was divided into two groups: group A included patients >/= 60 years, and group B those younger than that age. Survival was analyzed for the overall population and for both age groups during a 10-year follow-up period. RESULTS: Group A included 36 patients (20.8%) and group B 142 patients (79.2%). Mean age was 63.7 +/- 2.9 years (60 to 74) in A, and 43 +/- 13.9 years (4 to 59) in B. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher among group A (n = 11, 31.4%) compared to B (n = 17, 12.1%, P =.008). Survival at 1, 5, and 10 years was 61.5% +/- 8%, 58.1% +/- 8.3%, and 49.8% +/- 10.5% group A; and 84.2% +/- 3%, 73.7% +/- 4.1%, and 69.9% +/- 4.7 for group B. Elderly patients showed a lower survival rate (49.8%) compared with the younger group (69.9%) at 10-year follow-up (P =.007). Conditional survival at 9 years failed to show significant differences (A 72.2% vs B 79.6%, P =.4). CONCLUSION: In our population, elderly recipients showed a higher in-hospital mortality. However, when the first post-OHT year was excluded, we found similar survival rates for both age groups.