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Article Abstract

Background: This study compared outcomes of patients waitlisted for orthotopic heart transplantation with durable left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) before and after the October 18, 2018 heart allocation policy change.

Methods: The United Network of Organ Sharing database was queried to identify 2 cohorts of adult candidates with durable LVAD listed within seasonally-matched, equal-length periods before (old policy era [OPE]) and after the policy change (new policy era [NPE]). The primary outcomes were 2-year survival from the time of initial waitlisting, as well as 2-year post-transplant survival. Secondary outcomes included incidence of transplantation from the waitlist and de-listing due to either death or clinical deterioration.

Results: A total of 2,512 candidates were waitlisted, 1,253 within the OPE and 1,259 within the NPE. Candidates under both policies had similar 2-year survival after waitlisting, as well as a similar cumulative incidence of transplantation and de-listing due to death and/or clinical deterioration. A total of 2,560 patients were transplanted within the study period, 1,418 OPE and 1,142 within the NPE. Two-year post-transplant survival was similar between policy eras, however, the NPE was associated with a higher incidence of post-transplant stroke, renal failure requiring dialysis, and a longer hospital length of stay.

Conclusions: The 2018 heart allocation policy has conferred no significant impact on overall survival from the time of initial waitlisting among durable LVAD-supported candidates. Similarly, the cumulative incidence of transplantation and waitlist mortality have also been largely unchanged. For those undergoing transplantation, a higher degree of post-transplant morbidity was observed, though survival was not impacted.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.healun.2023.02.002DOI Listing

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