The impact of multidisciplinary care on early morbidity and mortality after heart transplantation.

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1 septembre 2017

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info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1093/icvts/ivx151

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info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/pmid/28541443

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info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/eissn/1569-9285

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info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/urn/urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_22E5650465D63

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M. Schmidhauser et al., « The impact of multidisciplinary care on early morbidity and mortality after heart transplantation. », Serveur académique Lausannois, ID : 10.1093/icvts/ivx151


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The impact of multidisciplinary care on outcome after heart transplantation (HTx) remains unclear. This retrospective study investigates the impact of multidisciplinary care on the primary end point 1-year all-cause mortality (ACM) and the secondary end point mean acute cellular rejection (ACR) grade within the first postoperative year. This study includes a total 140 HTx recipients (median age: 53.5 years; males: 80%; donor/recipient gender mismatch: 38.3%; mean length of in-hospital stay: 34 days; mean donor age: 41 years). Multidisciplinary care was implemented in 2008, 66 HTx recipients had operation in 2000-07 and 74 patients had HTx thereafter (2008-14). Non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy was more prevalent in HTx recipients of 2000-07 (63.6 vs 43.2%; P = 0.024). Pre-transplant mechanical circulatory support was more frequent in 2008-14 (9.1 vs 24.3%; P = 0.030). Groups were not different for pre-transplant cardiovascular risk factors or other comorbidity, invasive haemodynamics or echocardiographic parameters. In-hospital and 1-year ACM were numerically lower in 2008-14 (16.2 vs 22.2%; 18.9% vs 25.8%; P = 0.47/0.47, respectively). In 2000-07, pre-transplant weight and diabetes mellitus predicted in-hospital ACM (odds ratio -0.14, P = 0.02; OR 5.24, P = 0.01, respectively) while post-transplant length of in-hospital stay was related with in-hospital ACM (odds ratio -0.10; P = 0.016) and 1-year ACM (odds ratio -0.07; P = 0.007). In 2000-07, the mean grade of ACR within the first postoperative year was higher (0.65 vs 0.20; P 

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