Cardiac Transplant Rejection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Long-term Outcomes After Non-invasive Assessment of Acute Cardiac Rejection in Heart Transplantation : the Marie Lannelongue Hospital Experience
Pathological analysis is the gold standard for diagnosis of acute allograft rejection after
heart transplantation (HTx). This method requires repeated endomyocardial biopsies during the
first post-operative year. However the sensitivity of endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) is not
perfect and can be associated with major complications including fatal tamponade. Moreover,
repeated biopsies are associated with reduced quality of life for HTx recipients.
Since almost 20 years, the investigators do not perform routinely EMB for acute rejection
screening. Early left ventricular diastolic dysfunction was investigated according to a
standardized protocol. The investigators sought to analyze the long-term post-transplant
outcomes without systematic EMB. The investigators hypothesize that exclusive echographic
screening was not associated with impaired outcomes.
Demographic characteristics of heart transplant recipients and organ donors were
prospectively collected in a local database. All HTx successively performed in the Hospital
Marie Lannelongue from 1990 to 2016 were included. From 1990 to 1997, both EMB and cardiac
echo were routinely performed at each medical follow-up date. After 1997, only cardiac echo
was used to detect early acute allograft rejection. The investigators collected the results
of all EMB and synchronous cardiac echo in patients transplanted between 1990 and 1997 (group
A, validation cohort), and clinical events and long-term survival in patients transplanted
from 1998 to 2016 (group B, standardization cohort). For our purpose, the investigators
graded the histological patterns of acute cardiac rejection according to the 1990
international classification. Cardiac echo assessment included the isovolumic relaxation
time, E-wave velocity and E/A ratio. Impaired left ventricular relaxation was consistent with
acute cardiac rejection.
The investigators therefore analyzed the rate of positive and negative EMB during the first
post-transplant year and compared these results to the synchronous cardiac echo report in
group A. Sensibility and specificity of cardiac echo to detect acute cardiac rejection were
calculated. The rate of acute cardiac rejection during the first year was collected in group
B and compared to group A. Finally, long-term survival was analyzed according to the
Kaplan-Meier approach and compared between group A and B (log-rank test). The investigators
hypothesize that the participant will not observe any differences between groups considering
the rate of acute cardiac rejection during the first year. In addition, the investigators do
not expect to find any significant difference in long-term survival between the two cohorts.
These findings may have a major impact on HTx follow-up since systematic EMB could be
replaced by a standardized cardiac echo protocol focusing on left ventricular wall
relaxation. EMB should therefore only be indicated in case of acute allograft dysfunction
without evidence of rejection on conventional cardiac echo.
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