Background: The development of local and systemic infection is a significant risk factor associated with implantation of a ventricular assist device. The immunologic consequence of continuous-flow rotary blood pumps is not known.
Methods: Six male adult patients (mean age 47 plus minus 10.3) with end-stage left heart failure received a DeBakey VAD axial-flow pump for use as a bridge to transplantation. (Four patients underwent transplantation after a mean 115 plus minus 14 days; 2 patients are still waiting for the allograft.)
Results: We prospectively monitored T-cell populations and apoptosis-specific aberrant T-cell activation via CD95 triggering and annexin V binding to lymphocytes, identifying T cells undergoing early phases of apoptosis, within the first 10 weeks. Moreover, soluble death-inducing receptors soluble CD95 and soluble tumor necrosis factor-R1 were evaluated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Conclusion: Patients bridged to transplantation by a nonpulsatile ventricular assist device demonstrated an initial pronounced apoptosis-specific immune alteration by increased annexin V binding to CD3 T cells and death-inducing receptors soluble CD95/tumor necrosis factor-R1 (all P <.001). All parameters normalized after 7 weeks to baseline. No blood-borne sepsis was detected, as defined by blood culture, within the first 10 weeks of the cohort study. These results indicate a biphasic immunologic response in patients with end-stage heart failure treated with nonpulsatile ventricular assist devices.