학술논문

Clinical Risk Factors and Prognostic Model for Primary Graft Dysfunction after Lung Transplantation in Patients with Pulmonary Hypertension.
Document Type
article
Source
Annals of the American Thoracic Society. 14(10)
Subject
Lung Transplant Outcomes Group
Lung
Humans
Hypertension
Pulmonary
Obesity
Body Mass Index
Prognosis
Lung Transplantation
Linear Models
Logistic Models
Risk Factors
Retrospective Studies
Time Factors
Adult
Middle Aged
Tissue Donors
United States
Female
Male
Primary Graft Dysfunction
Young Adult
lung transplantation
primary graft dysfunction
pulmonary hypertension
Rare Diseases
Clinical Research
Cardiovascular
Transplantation
Organ Transplantation
Respiratory
Good Health and Well Being
Language
Abstract
RationalePulmonary hypertension from pulmonary arterial hypertension or parenchymal lung disease is associated with an increased risk for primary graft dysfunction after lung transplantation.ObjectiveWe evaluated the clinical determinants of severe primary graft dysfunction in pulmonary hypertension and developed and validated a prognostic model.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients in the multicenter Lung Transplant Outcomes Group with pulmonary hypertension at transplant listing. Severe primary graft dysfunction was defined as PaO2/FiO2 ≤200 with allograft infiltrates at 48 or 72 hours after transplantation. Donor, recipient, and operative characteristics were evaluated in a multivariable explanatory model. A prognostic model derived using donor and recipient characteristics was then validated in a separate cohort.ResultsIn the explanatory model of 826 patients with pulmonary hypertension, donor tobacco smoke exposure, higher recipient body mass index, female sex, listing mean pulmonary artery pressure, right atrial pressure and creatinine at transplant, cardiopulmonary bypass use, transfusion volume, and reperfusion fraction of inspired oxygen were associated with primary graft dysfunction. Donor obesity was associated with a lower risk for primary graft dysfunction. Using a 20% threshold for elevated risk, the prognostic model had good negative predictive value in both derivation and validation cohorts (89.1% [95% confidence interval, 85.3-92.8] and 83.3% [95% confidence interval, 78.5-88.2], respectively), but low positive predictive value.ConclusionsSeveral recipient, donor, and operative characteristics were associated with severe primary graft dysfunction in patients with pulmonary hypertension, including several risk factors not identified in the overall transplant population. A prognostic model with donor and recipient clinical risk factors alone had low positive predictive value, but high negative predictive value, to rule out high risk for primary graft dysfunction.