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Impact of Donor Core Body Temperature on Graft Survival After Heart Transplantation.

Transplantation 2018 July 11
BACKGROUND: A previous donor intervention trial found that induction of mild therapeutic hypothermia in the brain-dead donor reduced the dialysis requirement after kidney transplantation. Consequences on the performance of cardiac allografts after transplantation were not explored to date.

METHODS: Cohort study investigating 3-year heart allograft survival according to spontaneous core body temperature (CBT) assessed on the day of organ procurement. The study is nested in the database of the randomized trial of donor pretreatment with low-dose dopamine (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT000115115).

RESULTS: 99 heart transplant recipients who had received a cardiac allograft from a multiorgan donor enrolled in the dopamine trial were grouped by tertiles of the donor's CBT assessed by a mere temperature reading 4-20 hours before procurement (lowest, 32.0-36.2°C; middle, 36.3-36.8°C; highest, 36.9-38.8°C). Baseline characteristics considering demographics of donors and recipients, concomitant donor treatments, donor hemodynamic and respiratory parameters as well as underlying cardiac diseases in recipients, pretransplant hemodynamic assessments, including pretransplant inotropic / mechanical support, urgency, and waiting-time were similar. A lower CBT was associated with inferior heart allograft survival, hazard ratio (HR) 0.53, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.31-0.93, per tertile; p=0.02, and HR 0.68, 95% CI 0.50-0.93, per degree Celsius; p=0.02, when CBT was included as continuous explanatory variable in the Cox regression analysis.

CONCLUSIONS: A lower CBT in the brain-dead donor before procurement may associate with an unfavorable clinical course after heart transplantation. More research is required, before therapeutic hypothermia can routinely be used in multiorgan donors when a cardiac transplantation is intended.

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