Impact of Heart Transplantation on
the Safety and Feasibility of the
Dobutamine Stress Test
Abdou Elhendy, MD, PhD,
b
Ron T. van Domburg, PhD,
a
Pascal Vantrimpont, MD,
a
Fabiola B. Sozzi, MD,
a
Jeroen J. Bax, MD, PhD,
a
Don Poldermans, MD, PhD,
a
Jos R. T. C. Roelandt, MD, PhD,
a
Lex P. W. M. Maat, MD, PhD,
a
and Aggie H. M. M. Balk, MD, PhD
a
Background: Dobutamine myocardial perfusion imaging is a useful method for
evaluation of coronary artery disease. However, this technique does not allow for
ischemia monitoring, which may have an impact on the safety of the test in heart
transplant recipients due to cardiac sensory denervation. The aim of this study was to
assess the impact of heart transplantation on the feasibility and complications of the
dobutamine stress test.
Methods: We studied 225 heart transplant recipients (mean age 57 7 years) and a
control group of 225 patients without previous transplant matched for age and gender
by dobutamine (up to 40 g/kg per minute) stress myocardial perfusion imaging.
Results: During the test, transplant recipients had a lower prevalence of premature
ventricular contractions (23% vs 37%, p 0.001) and ventricular tachycardia (0.04% vs
7.5%, p 0.0001) compared with control patients. By multivariate analysis, heart
transplantation was a powerful independent variable associated with a reduced risk of
ventricular arrhythmias (
2
= 20.8, p 0.0001) and minor side effects (nausea,
dizziness, anxiety, flushing, chills) (
2
= 20, p 0.0001) during dobutamine stress. The
target heart rate was reached in 82% of transplant recipients and in 77% of the control
group. Overall feasibility (achievement of the target heart rate and/or an ischemic end-
point) was 87% in the transplant and 86% in the control group.
Conclusions: Dobutamine stress myocardial perfusion imaging is a safe and feasible
method for evaluation of coronary artery disease in heart transplant recipients. The
prevalence of arrhythmias and minor complications using the dobutamine stress test is
lower in heart transplant recipients compared with control patients. The independent
association between heart transplantation and reduced risk of arrhythmias and minor
side effects of the dobutamine stress test indicates that cardiac sensory and autonomic
nerve function plays a major role in the induction of these complications during the
test. J Heart Lung Transplant 2001;20:399–406.
Heart transplantation is an effective intervention
for improvement of exercise tolerance and prolon-
gation of survival in patients with severe heart
failure.
1–4
The advances in immunosuppressive ther-
apy and improved prevention and management of
infection in these patients have resulted in both
From the
a
Thoraxcenter, University Hospital Rotterdam, Rotter-
dam, The Netherlands; and
b
Department of Cardiovascular
Disease and Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Min-
nesota.
Submitted June 13, 2000; accepted November 13, 2000.
Supported in part by the Department of Cardiology, Cairo
University Hospital, Cairo, Egypt.
Reprint requests: Abdou Elhendy, MD, Mayo Clinic, Plummer
Building A1, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, Minnesota 55905.
Telephone: 507-284-9470. Fax: 507-284-0164. E-mail: elhendy.
abdou@mayo.edu
Copyright © 2001 by the International Society for Heart and
Lung Transplantation.
1053-2498/01/$–see front matter PII S1053-2498(00)00319-3
399