Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) is a leading cause of graft failure in pediatric heart transplant recipients (HTRs). Early statin use has been shown to reduce CAV incidence and all-cause mortality in adult HTRs. We sought to evaluate the contemporary prevalence and trends of statin use in pediatric HTRs and the association between statin use with CAV development and graft failure.

Methods: Patients aged <17 years at the time of primary heart transplant who survived to ≥3 years without CAV were identified from the Pediatric Heart Transplant Society database (2001-2018). Statin use in the first 3 years posttransplant was defined as consecutive, intermediate, or absent. Kaplan-Meier survival, multivariable modeling, and propensity score-matched analyses evaluated associations between statin use and CAV incidence and graft survival, with subanalyses performed on subjects aged ≥10 years at transplant.

Results: Among 3,485 (of which 1,086 aged ≥10 years) HTRs, 584 (17%) received consecutive statin therapy, 647 (19%) received intermediate use, and 2,254 (65%) received no statin therapy. Statin use varied widely between sites, with increasing use in the ≥10-year-old cohort over time. By multivariate analysis, statin use was not associated with graft loss. Consecutive statin use was also not associated with graft survival or freedom from CAV development when compared to absent statin use in unmatched or propensity-matched analyses.

Conclusions: While statins remain commonly utilized in pediatric HTRs, early consecutive statin therapy did not decrease CAV incidence or graft loss. The differing effects of statins on CAV development and progression in pediatric vs adult HTRs suggest differing risk and mediating factors and require further study.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.healun.2023.11.021DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pediatric heart
8
heart transplant
8
transplant recipients
8
uncertain benefit
4
benefit statins
4
statins pediatric
4
recipients phts
4
phts analysis
4
analysis background
4
background cardiac
4

Similar Publications

Aortic and mitral valve repair in a child with rheumatic heart disease.

Multimed Man Cardiothorac Surg

September 2025

Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia

The patient had rheumatic heart disease, which resulted in severe aortic and mitral valve regurgitation. Repair of both valves was performed at 9 years of age. During surgery, the retracted aortic valve cusps required extension with bovine pericardial patches and suture reduction annuloplasty, and the mitral valve was repaired using a Cosgrove-Edwards (Edwards Lifesciences LLC, Irvine, CA) annuloplasty band.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: Many patients develop Fontan-associated liver disease (FALD) after undergoing the Fontan procedure-a surgical treatment for congenital heart disease such as single ventricle-owing to changes in venous pressure and cardiac output. Liver biopsy is the gold standard for diagnosing FALD, but has limitations. Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) is a popular non-invasive method for evaluating liver stiffness and fibrosis in FALD; however, no unified view exists.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To develop a natural language processing (NLP) pipeline for unstructured electronic health record (EHR) data to identify symptoms and functional impacts associated with Long COVID in children.

Materials And Methods: We analyzed 48 287 outpatient progress notes from 10 618 pediatric patients from 12 institutions. We evaluated notes obtained 28 to 179 days after a COVID-19 diagnosis or positive test.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Clotting factor concentrate (CFC), used to treat and prevent bleeding in hemophilia, is rendered ineffective if clotting factor neutralizing antibodies (inhibitors) develop. Inhibitors occur most often in children, early in treatment. The American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network (ATHN) 8: US Cohort Study of Previously Untreated Patients (PUPs) with Congenital Hemophilia, conducted in children born in 2010 to 2020 with severe or moderate hemophilia, was designed to determine the percentage of participants who developed a confirmed, clinically significant inhibitor within the first 50 CFC exposure days (EDs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Common pulmonary vein atresia (CPVA) is a rare congenital heart disease characterized by the absence of functional connectivity between the pulmonary vein and any other heart cavity or systemic venous structure. A 13-h-old newborn (G3P3) was admitted to the department of pediatrics of a local maternity hospital and given tracheal intubation ventilator for assisted breathing due to systemic cyanosis, respiratory distress, and poor response 4 h after birth. He was transferred to Handan Maternal and Child Health Hospital 7 h after birth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF