Abstract
Background: This study investigated the impact of weight change in
waitlisted candidates on posttransplant outcomes following orthotopic
heart transplantation (OHT). Methods: The United Network for Organ
Sharing database was queried to identify adult patients undergoing
isolated, primary OHT from 1/1/2010 to 3/20/2020. Patients were
stratified into 3 cohorts based on percent weight change from listing to
OHT. The primary outcome was one-year survival, and multivariable
modeling was used for risk-adjustment. A secondary analysis compared
outcomes of recipients waitlisted ≥90 days. Results: A total of 22,360
patients were included, 18,826 (84.2%) with stable weight, 1,672
(7.5%) with ≥5% weight loss, and 1,862 (8.3%) with ≥5% weight gain.
Median age was similar across cohorts. Waitlist time was longest in
patients with weight gain and shortest in those with stable weight (417
vs 74 days, P<0.001). The weight loss cohort had higher rates
of dialysis dependency, pacemaker, and drug-treated acute rejection at
one year (all P<0.05). Ninety-day and one-year posttransplant
survival was lowest in the weight loss cohort. Multivariable modeling
identified both ≥5% weight loss (HR 1.26, 95% CI 1.07-1.48) and
decreasing weight (per 1%, HR 1.02, 95% CI 1.01-1.03) as risk-adjusted
predictors of one-year mortality. In sub-analysis of recipients
waitlisted ≥90 days, ≥5% weight loss and decreasing weight remained
significant independent predictors for mortality. Conclusion: Waitlisted
OHT candidates with ≥5% weight loss comprised a small, but higher-risk
population with increased rates of postoperative complications and
decreased survival. Efforts focused on nutritional optimization and
preventing weight loss while awaiting OHT appear warranted.