Chest
Volume 114, Issue 1, July 1998, Pages 51-60
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Clinical Investigations
Primary Graft Failure Following Lung Transplantation

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Study objectives

To determine the incidence of primary graft failure (PGF) following lung transplantation, assess possible risk factors, and characterize its effect on outcomes.

Methods

Retrospective review of 100 consecutive patients undergoing lung transplantation at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center. Fifteen patients meeting diagnostic criteria for PGF (PGF+ group) were compared with 85 patients without this complication (PGF– group).

Results

The incidence of PGF was 15%. There was no significant difference in age, sex, underlying pulmonary disease, preoperative pulmonary artery systolic pressure, type of transplant, allograft ischemic times, use of cardiopulmonary bypass, or use of postoperative prostaglandin E1 infusion between the PGF+ and PGF– groups. Induction therapy with antilymphocyte globulin was used less frequently in the PGF+ group (p<0.005). Duration of mechanical ventilatory support was 36±43 days vs 4±6 days for the PGF+ and PGF– groups, respectively (p <0.0001). Hospital stay was significantly longer in the PGF+ group, averaging 75 ±105 days, compared with 27±38 days in the PGF group (p<0.005). One-year actuarial survival for the PGF+ group was only 40% compared with 69% for the PGF– group (p<0.005). Five of the six PGF+ survivors were ambulatory by 1 year; three were completely independent while two continued to require assistance with activities of daily living. Six-minute walk test distance among the ambulatory patients averaged 883±463 feet (range, 200 to 1,223 feet) compared with 1513±424 feet for the PGF– group (p<0.005). Among the subset of survivors who underwent single lung transplantation for COPD, the mean percent predicted FEV1 at 1 year was 43% for the PGF+ group and 55% for the PGF– groups, but this difference was not statistically significant.

Conclusions

PGF is a devastating postoperative complication, occuring in 15% of patients in the current series, and it is associated with a high mortality rate, lengthy hospitalization, and protracted and often compromised recovery among survivors.

Key words

complications
graft dysfunction
lung transplantation
reperfusion injury
respiratory failure

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