Fifty-seven patients underwent heart transplantation at our hospital between April 1986 and April 1991. In an attempt to assess the result of and the influence of contraindications seen in transplant recipients before transplantation on the outcome after transplantation, we have analyzed six of these "relative" contraindications: (1) age over 55 years (21% of patients); (2) pulmonary hypertension (pulmonary vascular resistance of more than 5 Wood units, and/or transpulmonary gradient of more than 12 mm Hg; 26% of patients); (3) renal failure (serum creatinine level of more than 2 mg/dl, and/or creatinine clearance of less than 35 ml/min; 11% of patients); (4) active infection (9% of patients); (5) diabetes mellitus (7% of patients); and (6) critical/unstable clinical condition before transplantation (25% of patients). An overall "risk score," obtained by adding one point for each contraindication, was also analyzed. Risk score was 0 (the "ideal" recipient) in 38% of patients, 1 in 25% of patients; 2 in 23% of patients; and 3 or more in 14% of patients. Actuarial survival was significantly lower for patients over 55 years of age (45% versus 68% at 18 months; p less than 0.05), for patients with elevated pulmonary vascular resistance (38% versus 72%; p less than 0.01), and for patients with kidney failure (16% versus 70%; p less than 0.01). On the contrary, survival at 18 months was not significantly different for patients with or without diabetes mellitus (50% versus 63%; not significant [NS]), active infection (60% versus 63%; NS), or critical/unstable condition (45% versus 69%; p less than 0.1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)