Background—
Recent data suggest that the Berlin Heart EXCOR Pediatric ventricular assist device is superior to extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for bridge to heart transplantation. Published data are limited to 1 in 4 children who received the device as part of the US clinical trial. We analyzed outcomes for all US children who received the EXCOR to characterize device outcomes in an unselected cohort and to identify risk factors for mortality to facilitate patient selection.
Methods and Results—
This multicenter, prospective cohort study involved all children implanted with the Berlin Heart EXCOR Pediatric ventricular assist device at 47 centers from May 2007 through December 2010. Multiphase nonproportional hazards modeling was used to identify risk factors for early (<2 months) and late mortality. Of 204 children supported with the EXCOR, the median duration of support was 40 days (range, 1–435 days). Survival at 12 months was 75%, including 64% who reached transplantation, 6% who recovered, and 5% who were alive on the device. Multivariable analysis identified lower weight, biventricular assist device support, and elevated bilirubin as risk factors for early mortality and bilirubin extremes and renal dysfunction as risk factors for late mortality. Neurological dysfunction occurred in 29% and was the leading cause of death.
Conclusions—
Use of the Berlin Heart EXCOR has risen dramatically over the past decade. The EXCOR has emerged as a new treatment standard in the United States for pediatric bridge to transplantation. Three-quarters of children survived to transplantation or recovery; an important fraction experienced neurological dysfunction. Smaller patient size, renal dysfunction, hepatic dysfunction, and biventricular assist device use were associated with mortality, whereas extracorporeal membrane oxygenation before implantation and congenital heart disease were not.
Protocol-driven management of NP patients was associated with better hospital survival and survival to S2P. Among protocol elements, gastrostomy usage was linked to both improved hospital survival and survival to S2P. Home surveillance was associated with increased survival to S2P.
Endothelin (ET)-1 is an endogenous vasoconstrictor which modulates norepinephrine (NE) release in myocardial ischemia reperfusion. Recent studies have demonstrated the pro- or anti-arrhythmic effects in reperfusion. The present studies were undertaken to test the hypothesis that ET receptors located in sympathetic nerve terminals modulate NE release associated with reperfusion arrhythmias (ventricular fibrillation; VF). Immunohistochemical studies showed that both ETA and ETB receptors exist in the sympathetic nerve varicosities, which were stained positive for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in the left ventricular wall in guinea pigs. Isolated guinea pig hearts were subjected to 20 min of normothermic global ischemia followed by 30 min reperfusion. Exogenously applied ET-1 (0.1 and 1 nM) dose-dependently increased NE release and the duration of VF, but these responses were significantly suppressed with the Na(+)/H(+) exchanger inhibitor, 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)-amiloride (10 microM). The ETA receptor antagonist (BQ123, 1 microM) and nonselective ET receptor antagonist (PD142893, 1 microM) significantly attenuated NE release and VF, whereas the ETB receptor antagonist (BQ788,300 nM) markedly elevated NE release but did not affect VF. These studies provide the first evidence that both ETA and ETB receptors, located in the sympathetic nerve varicosities, modulate NE release, at least in part, in association with reperfusion arrhythmias.
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