Impact of Institutional Routine Endomyocardial Surveillance Biopsy Practices on Rejection and Graft Survival in Pediatric Heart Transplantation

2021 
Purpose Routine surveillance biopsy (RSB) is performed to detect asymptomatic acute rejection (AR) after heart transplantation (HT). Variation in pediatric RSB across institutions is high. We examined center-based variation in RSB use and its relationship to graft loss, AR, coronary artery vasculopathy (CAV), and cost of care during the first year post-HT. Methods We linked the Pediatric Health Information System (PHIS) and Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR, 2002-2016), including all primary-HT aged 0-21. We scored institutional RSB strategy by the median number of first-year biopsies in recipients aged ≥12 months without rejection. Mixed effects regression analysis was used to adjust for potential confounders and center effects. Results Of 2,867 patients at 29 centers, we identified an inflection at the top-tertile of centers (834 patients at 10 centers with RSB-score≥4). Higher-RSB centers (i.e. those in the top-tertile) had more patients on pre-HT ventilator/ECMO (23% vs 18% p=0.04) and fewer with a positive crossmatch (13% vs 17% p=0.007). After adjusting for patient and center differences, higher RSB frequency was associated with diagnosed AR (OR 1.15 p=0.004), a trend toward treated AR (OR 1.09 p=0.083) and higher cost (US$450,708 vs 342,170, p Conclusion Higher RSB frequency is associated with increased diagnosis, but not treatment, of AR one-year post-HT. Graft survival and CAV appear unchanged at medium term follow-up. De-intensification at high-frequency institutions may be safe and reduce costs, but further study of differences in treated rejections are necessary.
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