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Expanding the Pediatric Heart Donor Pool: National Outcomes of Donation After Circulatory Death Versus Donation After Brain Death Heart Transplantation
Background Donation after circulatory death (DCD) is an increasingly accepted strategy to expand the adult heart donor pool, but its use in children remains limited and incompletely characterized. We compared national characteristics and post-transplant outcomes of pediatric DCD versus donation after brain death (DBD) heart transplantation. Methods We performed a retrospective cohort study of the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) registry, including patients younger than 18 years who underwent primary isolated heart transplantation between January 1993 and March 2025. Recipients were stratified by donor type (DCD vs DBD). Continuous variables were compared with the Mann Whitney U test and categorical variables with the Fisher exact test. Survival was estimated by the Kaplan Meier method and compared using the log-rank test and Cox proportional hazards regression. Results Of 10,671 pediatric heart transplant recipients, 33 (approximately 0.3%) received DCD allografts. The first DCD transplant was recorded in 2004, with a marked increase in 2023 to 2024. Compared with DBD recipients, DCD recipients were more frequently infants (<1 year, 51.5% vs 28.4%) and more often had congenital heart disease (69.7% vs 47.6%; P=0.033); DCD donors were younger (median 0 vs 6 years; P=0.038) and more frequently died of anoxia (72.7% vs 37.0%; P<0.001). Donor and recipient left ventricular mass were lower in the DCD group (P<0.05), but predicted left ventricular mass matching was similar. DCD recipients had longer hospital stays (median 31.5 vs 19 days; P=0.023); rates of treated rejection, dialysis, stroke, and pacemaker implantation were comparable. Early survival did not differ (30-day, 90-day, and 1-year), and Kaplan Meier survival through 5 years was not significantly different (hazard ratio 1.17; 95% CI 0.49 to 2.81; log-rank P=0.73). More than 90% of DCD transplants were performed in four UNOS regions (11, 4, 5, and 8). Conclusions In this national analysis, pediatric DCD heart transplantation was uncommon but expanding rapidly, concentrated in a few regions, and used preferentially in infants and children with congenital heart disease. Early post-transplant outcomes were not significantly different from DBD, supporting cautious expansion of DCD as a means of enlarging the pediatric donor pool. The small number of DCD recipients and limited followup warrant confirmation in larger, longer-term studies. Keywords: pediatric heart transplantation; donation after circulatory death; donor pool; congenital heart disease; OPTN registry; organ allocation.
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