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A Multi-Center International Analysis of Lung Transplantation Outcomes in Patients With COVID-19

Authors
  • Kashem, Mohammed Abul;
  • Loor, Gabriel;
  • Emtiazjoo, Amir;
  • Hartwig, Matthew;
  • Van Raemdonck, Dirk; 15853;
  • Calvelli, Hannah;
  • Pena, Andres Leon;
  • Salan-Gomez, Marcelo;
  • Zhao, Huaqing;
  • Warnick, Michael;
  • Villavicencio, Mauricio;
  • Ius, Fabio;
  • Ghadimi, Kamrouz;
  • Salman, Jawad;
  • Chandrashekaran, Satish;
  • Machuca, Tiago;
  • Sanchez, Pablo G.;
  • Subramaniam, Kathirvel;
  • Neyrinck, Arne;
  • Huddleston, Stephen;
  • And 7 more
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2024
Source
Lirias
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown
External links

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Lung transplantation has become increasingly utilized in patients with COVID-19. While several single-center and UNOS database studies have been published on lung transplants (LTs) for end-stage lung disease (ESLD) from Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), there is a lack of multi-center and international data. METHODS: This is a multicenter analysis from 11 high-volume lung transplant centers in the United States and Europe. Data were collected through the Multi-Institutional ECLS Registry and stratified by ESLD due to COVID-19 versus other etiologies. Demographics and clinical variables were compared using Chi-square test and Fisher's exact test. Survival was assessed by Kaplan-Meier curves and compared by log-rank test with propensity score matching. RESULTS: Of 1606 lung transplant recipients, 46 (2.9%) were transplanted for ESLD from COVID-19 compared to 1560 (97.1%) without a history of COVID-19. Among COVID-19 patients, 30 (65.2%) had COVID-19-associated ARDS and 16 (34.8%) had post-COVID-19 fibrosis. COVID-19 patients had higher lung allocation scores (78.0 vs. 44.4, p < 0.0001), had severely limited functional status (37.0% vs. 2.9%, p < 0.0001), had higher preoperative ECMO usage (65.2% vs. 5.4%, p < 0.0001), and spent less time on the waitlist (32 vs. 137 days, p < 0.0001). A 30-day survival was comparable between COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 patients before (100% vs. 98.7%, p = 0.39) and after propensity matching (p = 0.15). CONCLUSIONS: Patients who received LTs due to COVID-19 had short-term survival comparable to that of patients without COVID-19. Our findings support the idea that lung transplantation should be considered for select patients with ESLD due to COVID-19. / status: published

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