Effect of receiving a heart transplant: Analysis of a national cohort entered on to a waiting list, stratified by heart failure severity

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Abstract

Objective: To determine whether there is a survival benefit associated with cardiac transplantation in Germany. Design: Prospective observational cohort study. Setting: All 889 adult patients listed for a first heart transplant in Germany in 1997. Main outcome measure: Mortality, stratified by heart failure severity. Results: Within 1 year after listing, patients with a predicted high risk had the highest global death rate (51% v 32% and 29% for medium and low risk patients respectively; P<0.0001), had the highest risk of dying on the waiting list (32% v 20% and 20%; P=0.0003), and were more likely to receive a transplant (48% v 45% and 41%; P=0.01). Differences between the risk groups in outcome after transplantation did not reach significance (P=0.2). Transplantation was not associated with a reduction in mortality risk for the total cohort, but it did provide a survival benefit for the high risk group. Conclusion: Cardiac transplantation in Germany is currently associated with a survival benefit only in patients with a predicted high risk of dying on the waiting list. Patients with a predicted low or medium risk have no reduction in mortality risk associated with transplantation; they should be managed with organ saving approaches rather than transplantation. © 2000, BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. All rights reserved.

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APA

Deng, M. C., de Meester, johan m.j., Smits, J. M. A., Heinecke, J., Scheld, hans h., Treasure, T., & Murday, A. (2000). Effect of receiving a heart transplant: Analysis of a national cohort entered on to a waiting list, stratified by heart failure severity. BMJ, 321(7260), 540–545. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.321.7260.540

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