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Cardiac Transplant - What a GP Needs to Know
Heart transplantation provides unparalleled symptomatic relief and restoration of quality of life to a small minority of patients. The future therefore probably lies in further development of alternative treatments.1 Future alternatives to the current technology of cardiac allotransplantation may include xenotransplantation (transplantation of tissue and organs between different species) and/or non-biological replacement of the heart with mechanical devices.2
- Recipients: adverse factors include increasing age and high pulmonary vascular resistance.
- Donor heart: the age of the donor and the duration of graft ischaemia both have an impact on the quality of the donor heart.
Almost all adults presenting for transplant will have either a dilated idiopathic or ischaemic cardiomyopathy. Amongst children, dilated cardiomyopathy and congenital heart disease are the two most common indications.
Absolute contraindications
- Malignancy during the last 5 years
- Other life-threatening medical condition
- Continued abuse of alcohol or drugs
- Psychiatric history suggesting likely non-compliance with the required postoperative treatment regime
- Positive serology for HIV or hepatitis B
- Active infection
- Severe peripheral or cerebrovascular disease
- Active peptic ulcer disease
Relative contraindications
- Age over 65 years
- Significantly raised pulmonary vascular resistance
- Renal impairment
- Obesity
- Recent pulmonary infarction
- Diabetes with significant complications
- Giant-cell myocarditis
- Severe COPD
- Osteoporosis
- Exercise testing with measurement of maximum oxygen uptake is often used to make an objective assessment of the severity of cardiac dysfunction and therefore the necessity for cardiac transplant.
- Exercise testing results can be combined with other factors into a scoring system for likely survival, allowing an objective evaluation for patient selection. Adverse factors include:
- Presence of ischaemic heart disease
- Low left ventricular ejection fraction
- High resting heart rate
- Intraventricular conduction delay (QRS duration >0.12 seconds)
- Low mean resting blood pressure
- Low peak oxygen consumption
- Low serum sodium
- Matching of recipient and donor:
- The donor and recipient should be blood-group compatible.
- HLA matching is often not possible because of insufficient time. However pre-existing antibodies to HLA antigens (caused by e.g. blood transfusion, pregnancy or a previous transplant) may cause immediate rejection, which is often fatal.
- The operation:
- The donor heart is anastomosed to the pulmonary artery and aorta. Separate caval anastomoses keep the donor right atrium intact.
- Assuming no complications, discharge from hospital is usually about 2 weeks post-operation.
At 5 years after transplantation, about a third of patients have abnormal renal function, a third have transplant coronary artery disease, and a fifth have experienced malignancy.
- Complications of anaesthesia and surgery: e.g. bleeding, infection, drug reactions, deep vein thrombosis.
- Infection: particularly Epstein-Barr virus which is a major cause of death in the first year after transplant. May require intravenous acyclovir and a reduction of the dose of immunosuppressant medication.
- Chronic immunosupression: causes increased risk of malignancy (mainly skin cancer or lymphoma).
- Hypertension: may occur in up to 70% of recipients. ACE inhibitors are the first choice antihypertensives. ACE inhibitors and calcium-channel blockers may benefit graft vasculopathy.
- Renal dysfunction: due to a combination of drug toxicity and pre-existing renal disease.
- Hyperlipidaemia: 50% of recipients have raised lipids after 5 years. All adult heart transplant patients should be treated with a statin.
- Osteoporosis: secondary to immunosuppressant drugs.
- Acute rejection: between 20% to 40% of patients have at least one episode of acute rejection. Acute rejection causes diastolic dysfunction. Presentation may be subtle but features may include fever, flu-like symptoms, a third heart sound, raised filling pressures or atrial flutter.
- Chronic rejection: causes accelerated coronary artery disease due to immune damage to the coronary arteries. This is the most common cause of late death after transplantation.
- Immunosuppression: usual drugs used are ciclosporin A or tacrolimus together with corticosteroids and one other agent. Drug toxicity is almost inevitable.
- Steroid treatment: starts with large intravenous doses of methylprednisolone, followed by oral prednisolone. Some patients can be weaned off steroids but a small dose of prednisolone enables lower doses of the other drugs to be used.
- The third drug used in 'standard triple-drug regimens' is usually azathioprine. Mycophenolate mofetil is an alternative but is more expensive and its role has not yet been fully evaluated.
- Monitoring rejection episodes:
- The definitive investigation for detecting rejection is transvenous endomyocardial biopsy under local anaesthetic and radiological control. Echocardiography may have a role in children.
- Biopsy is performed weekly for the first month, then at decreasing intervals over the first year.
- Immunosuppression causes a high risk of infection, especially during the first few months after transplant.
- Within the first few weeks, infection is usually bacterial with common infections.
- Immunosuppression leads to a high risk of fungal infections, especially aspergillosis.
- CMV infection usually occurs in the first few months after transplantation. Prophylaxis with oral ganciclovir is used for patients at high risk. Intravenous ganciclovir is required for acute infection.
- Patients with fever require urgent investigations to identify the precise aetiology. Empirical antibiotics should be avoided unless for life-threatening infection.
- The risk of opportunistic infections reduces with time but can never be excluded.
- Malignant change in the skin exposed to sunlight is very common, and precautions to reduce exposure to sunlight are essential.
- Affects about 2% of transplant patients in the first year, and 1% per year thereafter.
- Clinical picture varies from infectious mononucleosis to a very malignant, multifocal lymphoma.
- In most cases, reduction of immunosuppression causes the lymphoma to shrink. Chemotherapy may be required.
- Graft vasculopathy is the commonest cause of death after the first year.
- Immunological damage to the coronary arteries may begin in the first few weeks after transplant. The process is accelerated with repeated rejection episodes, hyperlipidaemia, hypertension and the use of older donor hearts.
- Clinical presentation is subtle because of the denervation of the donor heart. May lead to shortness of breath on exertion, silent myocardial infarction and sudden death. Detection is by angiography.
- Treatment with angioplasty or coronary stenting is often ineffective because of persisting small vessel disease.
- Transplantation is effective in relieving the symptoms of heart failure. Over 90% of survivors are in New York Heart Association class I or II and report minimal limitation in activity.1
- Heart transplantation has a high early mortality: 15-20% of recipients die within a year of the operation. 10 year survival is 50% and 20 year survival is 15%.1
Document references
- Anyanwu A, Treasure T; Prognosis after heart transplantation: transplants alone cannot be the solution for end stage heart failure. BMJ. 2003 Mar 8;326(7388):509-10.
- Hunt SA; Current status of cardiac transplantation. JAMA. 1998 Nov 18;280(19):1692-8. [abstract]
- Dark JH; Oxford Textbook of Medicine 4th edition; Section 15.33: Cardiac transplantation and mechanical circulatory support.
Internet and further reading
- Mancini MC; Heart Transplantation; eMedicine; February 2006
- Chinnock RE; Heart Transplantation (Infants and Children; eMedicine; October 2006
- Department of Health; National heart and lung transplant standards - 2006.
DocID: 1911
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp24491
Last Updated: 29 Nov 2007
Review Date: 28 Nov 2009
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