2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2014.04.021
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Elevated pre-transplant pulmonary vascular resistance is not associated with mortality in children without congenital heart disease: A multicenter study

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Cited by 17 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…The lack of cardiac catheterization data in 70% of pediatric patients in the UNOS database significantly reduces the ability to make broadly generalizable conclusions. The completeness of hemodynamic data in the UNOS database mirrors that found in other studies suggesting that a large number of pediatric patients currently undergo transplantation without the need for hemodynamic assessment via catheterization . The risks associated with catheterization in infants and children combined with the presumption of a high rate of reversibility of pulmonary hypertension in young patients call into question the need for pre‐OHT catheterization in appropriately selected patients ; our sensitivity analysis of survival in patients without PVRI data (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…The lack of cardiac catheterization data in 70% of pediatric patients in the UNOS database significantly reduces the ability to make broadly generalizable conclusions. The completeness of hemodynamic data in the UNOS database mirrors that found in other studies suggesting that a large number of pediatric patients currently undergo transplantation without the need for hemodynamic assessment via catheterization . The risks associated with catheterization in infants and children combined with the presumption of a high rate of reversibility of pulmonary hypertension in young patients call into question the need for pre‐OHT catheterization in appropriately selected patients ; our sensitivity analysis of survival in patients without PVRI data (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…These findings support the conclusions of several studies which suggest that PVRi is not an accurate predictor of post‐transplant mortality in pediatric heart recipients . Several explanations have been proposed as to why PVRi may not be an appropriate tool for HTx risk assessment in this population, most of which center around the fact that PVRi is a calculated (as opposed to directly measured) variable.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Several explanations have been proposed as to why PVRi may not be an appropriate tool for HTx risk assessment in this population, most of which center around the fact that PVRi is a calculated (as opposed to directly measured) variable. Specifically, calculation of PVRi depends on reliable determination of cardiac output, for which most laboratories utilize assumed values for oxygen consumption (based on norms for age) that may be inaccurate when applied to patients with end‐stage heart failure . Furthermore, patients with CHD can have a variety of anatomic and/or physiologic abnormalities that make assessment of pulmonary blood flow—and therefore PVRi—very difficult, if not impossible .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They also performed propensity matching of the cohorts to control for other variables, including missing catheterization information, and still found no influence of PVRI on outcomes. These findings are similar to other recent analysis by the Pediatric Heart Transplant Study Group where a PVRI of 5 Woods units × m 2 was also not associated with decreased survival in a large, multicenter, pediatric cohort .…”
supporting
confidence: 91%