Circulation, Vol 89, 2079-2084, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
GL Winters, PJ Hauptman, JA Jarcho and FJ Schoen
BACKGROUND: Acute rejection may be suspected in heart transplant recipients
in the setting of new onset of clinical symptoms or alterations in cardiac
function. Immediate diagnosis may be obtained by performing a frozen
section on endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) specimens. However, little is known
about the indications for, and the diagnostic reliability of, this
procedure. METHODS AND RESULTS: EMBs with frozen section (n = 98) from 65
of 214 consecutive orthotopic heart transplant recipients were reviewed and
divided into early (< or = 45 days; n = 47) and late (> 45 days; n =
51) posttransplant periods. Frozen section diagnoses (means = 1.5 EMB
samples) were compared with corresponding permanent section diagnoses
(means = 4.4 EMB samples), and clinical indications were analyzed.
Comparison of frozen and permanent section interpretation revealed
concordant pathological processes-rejection (n = 31) versus no rejection (n
= 37) versus ischemic injury (n = 20)-in 88 of 98 (90%) cases. Discordant
pathological processes on frozen versus permanent section in 10 of 98 (10%)
cases could be attributed to ischemic injury (n = 5), sampling (n = 4), and
infection (n = 1). In the 92 cases with defined clinical indications, the
indication and number of EMBs positive for rejection early and late after
transplantation were arrhythmia: 2 of 12 early, 4 of 10 late; congestive
heart failure: 1 of 2 early, 5 of 12 late; fever: 0 of 2 early, 1 of 4
late; echo abnormality: 0 of 5 early, 0 of 1 late; syncope: 1 of 5 early, 0
of 1 late; hypotension: 1 of 3 early, 1 of 2 late; noncompliance: 0 of 0
early, 4 of 5 late; more than one of the above: 3 of 7 early, 2 of 5 late;
other: 1 of 7 early, 1 of 9 late; total: 9 of 43 early, 18 of 49 late.
CONCLUSIONS: Frozen section on EMB specimens accurately reflected the
permanent section diagnosis in 90% of cases. No specific clinical
indication predicted EMB rejection positivity with high sensitivity in
either the early or late posttransplant periods.
ARTICLES
Immediate evaluation of endomyocardial biopsies for clinically suspected rejection after heart transplantation
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115.
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