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CURRENT ADVANCES IN HEART TRANSPLANTATION
CONTENTS
Editorial: Vascular Rejection in Heart Transplantation: When Ignorance
is NOT Bliss.
ix
Jagat Narula and James B. Young
Preface
xi
Mandeep R. Mehra
Understanding the Sensitized Patient
1
Ronald H. Kerman
New technologies have resulted in the ability to identify the presence of IgG human
leukocyte antigen (HLA) or non-HLA antibodies in the sera of potential solid organ
transplant recipients. Knowledge of the presence of these antibodies, their antigen
specificities, and strength (titer) is crucial to understanding a patient’s state of immuno-
logic sensitization and reactivity. Finally, these data, when correlated with sensitive
crossmatch results, allow clinicians to make more knowledgeable clinical decisions when
paring donors and recipients for transplant.
Contemporary Concepts in Noncellular Rejection
11
Jon A. Kobashigawa
Acute rejection is the major cause of morbidity and mortality in the first year after
cardiac transplantation. Cellular rejection is the most common form of rejection ob-
served; however, noncellular rejection is being seen more often. This noncellular rejection
is mostly a result of less well-characterized antibody-mediated mechanisms. Antibody-
mediated rejection is associated more commonly with hemodynamic compromise,
increased graft loss, cardiac allograft vasculopathy, and increased mortality. Histologic,
immunofluorescence, and immunoperoxidase studies of endomyocardial biopsies from
such patients often reveal intravascular macrophages and immunoglobulin and comple-
ment deposition in capillaries, in the absence of lymphoid infiltrates. Severely ill patients
require intense therapy, which includes high-dose corticosteroids, cytolytic agents,
intravenous heparin, intravenous gamma globulin, plasmapheresis, and/or antiproli-
ferative agents. Further understanding of noncellular rejection will lead to more effective
therapy.
Tolerance in Heart Transplantation: The Holy Grail, or an Attainable Goal?
17
Richard N. Pierson III
The father of cardiac transplantation, Norman Shumway, famously predicted that toler-
ance was the future of the field, and always would be. Although his prediction remains
VOLUME 3 Æ NUMBER 1 Æ JANUARY 2007
v
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true to date, significant progress has been made toward this goal, the ‘‘Holy Grail’’ for
transplant clinicians. Current efforts are fueled by disappointing long-term outcomes
associated with chronic immunosuppression, and the promise that partial or complete
tolerance will impact long-term results favorably. This article provides a clinical defini-
tion of tolerance primarily based on lessons learned from animal heart allograft models.
It reviews several promising strategies for inducing tolerance and detecting its presence
through the use of biomarkers in peripheral blood or the graft, and outlines a possible
path toward making this vision a clinical reality.
Induction Therapy in Cardiac Transplantation: When and Why?
31
David A. Baran
Induction therapy has continued to be a subject of controversy in heart transplantation
for more than 20 years. It is an example of a therapy that is logical, and ought to be better
than ‘‘doing without.’’ However, a careful review of the evidence suggests otherwise.
Except for patients where the benefits clearly outweigh the short and long-term risks,
the use of induction therapy should be avoided. In immunosuppression, as in life, there
is no ‘‘free lunch.’’ Clinicians need to be certain they fully understand what they are
ordering when asking for induction therapy to be administered to their patients.
Immunosuppression on the Horizon
43
Howard J. Eisen
Many novel immunosuppressive agents are under active clinical investigation. In addi-
tion, creative approaches are being developed for the use of established immunosup-
pressive agents, with the goal of minimizing immunosuppression as early as possible
posttransplantation. The hope is that these approaches will minimize the toxicity of these
agents without sacrificing efficacy. Evidence suggests that the nephrotoxicity of
calcineurin inhibitors can be reduced using these approaches. The introduction of newer
immunosuppressive agents, including the proliferation signal inhibitors, raises the pos-
sibility that some of the long-term scourges of cardiac transplantation, including cardiac
allograft vasculopathy and malignancy, can be ameliorated. Finally, costimulatory path-
way inhibitors and other new immunosuppressive agents offer hope that all these goals
can be accomplished with very low long-term maintenance immunosuppression.
Echocardiography in the Cardiac Transplant Recipient
51
Eric M. Thorn and Christopher R. de Filippi
Despite the widespread use of echocardiography in the cardiac allograft recipient, the
clinical usefulness of this practice is not well defined. In this article, the authors review
the spectrum of echocardiographic findings in the adult heart transplant patient. Appre-
ciation of typical alterations from ‘‘normal’’ allows the transplant physician to identify
clinically significant changes and to avoid unnecessary invasive procedures based on
misinterpretation of these differences. Though abnormalities of systolic and diastolic
function correlate with episodes of acute rejection, the primary diagnostic usefulness
of echocardiography in acute rejection is guiding the endomyocardial biopsy. Addion-
ally, echocardiography has found a role as a supplement to invasive angiography in
the diagnosis of cardiac allograft vasculopathy.
Biomarkers After Heart Transplantation: Nongenomic
69
Thomas J. Dengler, Christian A. Gleissner, Roland Klingenberg, Falk-Udo Sack,
Philipp A. Schnabel, and Hugo A. Katus
Patient monitoring following heart transplantation aims to detect complications (eg, acute
graft rejection, vasculopathy, infection) early and contributes to risk prognostication.
vi
CONTENTS
Numerous biomarkers of different biologic pathways have been evaluated as ancillary
diagnostic and prognostic tools to reduce the need for invasive and expensive technical
investigations. With the possible exception of cardiac troponins and N-type natriuretic
peptides, no biomarkers have become established firmly in posttransplant patient
surveillance. This article aims to show that the identification of a single biomarker that
meets all needs (noninvasive diagnosis of rejection, prediction of transplant vasculopa-
thy, survival prognostication) is unlikely. Rather, multiple marker strategies, including
gene-based tests, are likely to enhance future monitoring quality and enable individual-
ized risk-adapted patient management.
Genomic Biomarkers and Heart Transplantation
83
Mandeep R. Mehra and Patricia A. Uber
Clinicians have entered into a new paradigm for managing heart transplant patients
with use of multimarker gene expression profiling. Early after transplantation, when
corticosteroid modification is the main concern, gene expression testing might assist in
optimizing the balance of immunosuppression, defraying the occurrence of rejection,
and avoiding crisis intervention. Late after transplantation, the reliance on endomyocar-
dial biopsy could be lessened. These advances, if continually validated in practice, could
usher in an era of decreased immunosuppression complications, lesser need for invasive
surveillance, and more clinical confidence in immunosuppressive strategies.
Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy: An Update
87
Ilke Sipahi and Randall C. Starling
Allograft vasculopathy remains the nemesis of long-term survival in heart transplanta-
tion. Possible modifying risk factors such as obesity, diabetes, and hypertension should
continue to be pursued aggressively. All patients should receive statins. Clinical trials
will provide the evidence needed to ascertain whether mammalian target of rapamycin
inhibitors should be used in de novo cardiac transplant recipients to attenuate cardiac
allograft vasculopathy (CAV). Intravascular ultrasound appears to play a key role in
the diagnosis and evaluation of new treatments, and may indeed represent a surrogate
marker that can be used to tailor management and improve outcomes. A better under-
standing of CAV is needed to develop targeted preventive therapies. Ongoing research
in native atherosclerosis and vascular biology may provide answers within the next
decade.
When is Retransplantation a Viable Option?
97
Maryl R. Johnson
As the number of recipients of heart transplantation grows over time and they survive
longer, more are at risk for developing severe cardiac allograft vasculopathy and allo-
graft dysfunction, which might lead to consideration for retransplantation. Clearly, out-
comes following cardiac retransplantation are compromised, and with donor shortage,
the selection of candidates must be judicious. Retransplantation appears most appropri-
ate for those patients more than 6 months following original heart transplantation, who
have severe cardiac allograft vasculopathy and associated left ventricular dysfunction, or
allograft dysfunction and progressive symptoms of heart failure in the absence of acute
rejection. Relative contraindications to transplantation (ie, advanced age, comorbidities,
psychosocial issues) require thorough assessment when retransplantation is being
considered.
Index
107
CONTENTS
vii
FORTHCOMING ISSUES
April 2007
The Role of Surgery, Part I
Stephen Westaby, BSc, MS, PhD
and Mario C. Deng, MD, Guest Editors
July 2007
The Role of Surgery, Part II
Stephen Westaby, BSc, MS, PhD
and Mario C. Deng, MD, Guest Editors
October 2007
Diastolic Dysfunction and Heart Failure
Mani Vannan, MBBS, MRCP, MRCPI
and Bertram Pitt, MD, Guest Editors
RECENT ISSUES
October 2006
Valvular Disease
Blase Anthony Carabello, MD, Guest Editor
July 2006
Natriuretic Peptides
Roger M. Mills, MD, W. H. Wilson Tang, MD
and John C. Burnett, MD, Guest Editors
April 2006
Noninvasive Imaging of Heart Failure
Vasken Dilsizian, MD, Mario J. Garcia, MD
and David Bello, MD, Guest Editors
January 2006
Diabetic-Hypertensive PreeHeart Failure
Patient
David S.H. Bell, MB, Guest Editor
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Heart Failure Clin 3 (2007) ix–x
Editorial
Vascular Rejection in Heart Transplantation:
When Ignorance is NOT Bliss...
Jagat Narula, MD, PhD James B. Young, MD
Consulting Editors
The late failure of a cardiac allograft has been
attributed to the development of chronic rejection,
including allograft vasculopathy and ventricular
dysfunction. Chronic rejection shortens the car-
diac allograft life markedly in comparison with re-
nal allograft. It has been tacitly believed that
vasculitis early after transplantation may be the
basis of subsequent vasculopathy. This belief is
based on a uniform, concentric, and centripetal
pattern of involvement of the coronary vascula-
ture. However, we do little to detect vasculitis in
our early management of allograft recipients. On
the other hand, the presence of arteritis in renal al-
lografts raises the level of rejection to maximum
levels, and management is upgraded accordingly.
Unfortunately, small muscular arteries are rarely
observed in endomyocardial biopsy because bi-
opsy specimens are much smaller than those ob-
tained in kidney; also, unlike kidneys, there is no
reliable biochemical indicator of myocardial dam-
age. Left ventricular ejection fraction and
hemodynamics are very crude markers and per-
turbed only late in the rejection process. Based
on the description of vasculitis in renal allograft
biopsies, the presence of immunoglobulin and
complement fixation in capillaries has been used
as a surrogate marker for vasculitis in cardiac al-
lografts. It has been suggested that such indicators
of humoral rejection should upstage the level of
rejection to a severe category. In clinical practice,
we neither search for humoral rejection routinely,
nor do we know that complement fixation is
equivalent to arteritis. Furthermore, we do not
know whether overtreatment based on comple-
ment fixation data will result in better graft sur-
vival. To summarize, we do not know much
about the vascular rejection, we often do not get
to see small muscular arteries in endomyocardial
biopsies, and we do not have other diagnostic tests
that will give us insight into this problem. Is igno-
rance bliss? We think not!
Interestingly, we have used noninvasive and
invasive tools to look for concentric vasculopathy
almost on annual basis, knowing almost certainly
that identification of chronic vasculopathy is of
limited value. Whereas coronary angiography can
demonstrate gradually worsening pruning of the
distal vasculature in allograft arteriopathy, myo-
cardial perfusion studies often remain more or less
normal due to balanced ischemia; thus the rub of
studies that rely on ‘‘relative’’ perfusion or wall
motion differences!
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doi:10.1016/j.hfc.2007.03.005
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