By Sonia Garg, M.D.
Assistant Professor of
Internal Medicine
I
was pleased to moderate an oral abstract session in
which researchers from across the country presented their work in advanced
heart failure therapies. As background, for many patients with advanced heart
failure, viable treatment options include implantation of a left ventricular
assist device (LVAD) and, for a smaller subset of patients, heart
transplantation, with median survival now exceeding 10 years.
Two of the abstracts addressed some of the major complications of
LVADs, including stroke and GI bleeding. Dr. David Markham presented the
two-year outcome data of the ENDURANCE supplemental trial, which demonstrated
similar rates of stroke in patients with an HVAD and HeartMate II (two types of
LVADs) and reiterated the importance of blood pressure control in reducing
stroke in patients with an HVAD. The next abstract described low levels of
butyrate-producing microbes and an associated lower concentration of butyrate
in the stool of LVAD patients with GI bleeding. While butyrate has been
identified to inhibit angiogenesis, further study is needed to understand the
mechanisms involved in these findings.
The remaining presentations centered around heart transplantation.
One of the abstracts showed that using predicted heart mass (rather than height
and weight) to guide size-matching between the donor and the recipient could
allow for improved donor utilization because fewer organs would be turned down
for inappropriate size.