Outcomes of lung transplantation for infants and children with genetic disorders of surfactant metabolism

WB Eldridge, Q Zhang, A Faro, SC Sweet… - The Journal of …, 2017 - Elsevier
WB Eldridge, Q Zhang, A Faro, SC Sweet, P Eghtesady, A Hamvas, FS Cole, JA Wambach
The Journal of pediatrics, 2017Elsevier
Objective To compare outcomes of infants and children who underwent lung transplantation
for genetic disorders of surfactant metabolism (SFTPB, SFTPC, ABCA3, and NKX2-1) over 2
epochs (1993-2003 and 2004-2015) at St Louis Children's Hospital. Study design We
retrospectively reviewed clinical characteristics, mortality, and short-and long-term
morbidities of infants (transplanted at< 1 year; n= 28) and children (transplanted> 1 year; n=
16) and compared outcomes by age at transplantation (infants vs children) and by epoch of …
Objective
To compare outcomes of infants and children who underwent lung transplantation for genetic disorders of surfactant metabolism (SFTPB, SFTPC, ABCA3, and NKX2-1) over 2 epochs (1993-2003 and 2004-2015) at St Louis Children's Hospital.
Study design
We retrospectively reviewed clinical characteristics, mortality, and short- and long-term morbidities of infants (transplanted at <1 year; n = 28) and children (transplanted >1 year; n = 16) and compared outcomes by age at transplantation (infants vs children) and by epoch of transplantation.
Results
Infants underwent transplantation more frequently for surfactant protein-B deficiency, whereas children underwent transplantation more frequently for SFTPC mutations. Both infants and children underwent transplantation for ABCA3 deficiency. Compared with children, infants experienced shorter times from listing to transplantation (P = .014), were more likely to be mechanically ventilated at the time of transplantation (P < .0001), were less likely to develop bronchiolitis obliterans post-transplantation (P = .021), and were more likely to have speech and motor delays (P ≤ .0001). Despite advances in genetic diagnosis, immunosuppressive therapies, and supportive respiratory and nutritional therapies, mortality did not differ between infants and children (P = .076) or between epochs. Kaplan-Meier analyses demonstrated that children transplanted in epoch 1 (1993-2003) were more likely to develop systemic hypertension (P = .049) and less likely to develop post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disorder compared with children transplanted in epoch 2 (2004-2015) (P = .051).
Conclusion
Post-lung transplantation morbidities and mortality remain substantial for infants and children with genetic disorders of surfactant metabolism.
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