METAB‐HTX: prospective, longitudinal cohort study evaluating cardiac and systemic metabolism after heart transplantation
Amin Polzin, Daniel Scheiber, Fabian Voss, Jean Haurand, Elric Zweck, Daniel Oehler, Oliver Maier, Mareike Cramer, Maximilian Spieker, Constanze Moos, Ursala Tokhi, David Naguib, Philipp Mourikis, Marcel Benkhoff, Robert Wagner, Michael Roden, Heinz‐Peter Schultheiss

TL;DR
This study tracks heart transplant patients to understand how metabolic changes affect heart function and survival, aiming to improve long-term outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces a comprehensive, longitudinal approach to evaluate cardiac and systemic metabolism post-heart transplant, linking metabolic changes to clinical outcomes.
Findings
Metabolic deterioration post-HTX is hypothesized to impair cardiac function and survival.
The study will evaluate associations between metabolic changes, organ function, and transplant outcomes.
Early metabolic alterations may identify patients at risk for poor outcomes.
Abstract
Heart transplantation (HTX) is the treatment of choice for advanced heart failure. Still, long‐term survival needs to be improved. Recent studies showed that obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) as well as impaired renal and liver function are associated with mortality post‐HTX. There are many open questions including (i) optimal metabolic surveillance post‐transplant, (ii) association of metabolic deterioration and cardiac function, (iii) association with hepatic and renal deterioration, and (iv) optimal timing and choice of treatment. The METAB‐HTX trial will address these open questions, hypothesizing that metabolic deterioration post‐HTX is associated with impaired cardiac function and survival. METAB‐HTX is a prospective, longitudinal cohort study, enrolling 400 patients post‐HTX in a period of 5 years. Time‐series, deep cardiac, and metabolic phenotyping will be conducted. Cardiac…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTransplantation: Methods and Outcomes · Organ Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes · Viral Infections and Immunology Research
