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Featured researches published by David Crossland.


Heart | 2010

Cardiac transplantation in adults with congenital heart disease

C Irving; Gareth Parry; John O'Sullivan; John H. Dark; R Kirk; David Crossland; M Chaudhari; Massimo Griselli; J R L Hamilton; Asif Hasan

Background Due to increasing success with repair or palliation in childhood, there is a rapidly growing population of adult patients with complex congenital heart disease who may require transplantation. There remains little data on outcomes of cardiac transplantation in this group. Methods 38 orthotopic cardiac transplants were performed in 37 patients (18 men) ≥18 years of age with congenital heart disease (CHD) from 1988 to 2009 in our institution. Outcomes were reviewed using medical records and transplant databases. Results 15 patients (41%) had univentricular and 22 (59%) biventricular physiology. The biggest group was transposition of the great arteries following atrial switch in eight patients (22%). Six (16%) had no previous surgical intervention. Mean age at transplant was 33.5 years (range 19.1–59.9 years). 11 patients (30%) required additional surgical procedures at transplant. 16 (43%) died, 12 early and 4 late deaths (1.8, 2.4, 2.7 and 7 years). Survival was 70% at 30 days, 68% at 1 year, 58% at 5 years and 53% at 10 and 15 years. Outcome improved in later eras with reduction in 30-day mortality from 50% to 18% and increase in 5-year survival from 50% to 69%. Two patients developed post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease. None required long-term renal replacement therapy. One patient was re-transplanted for cardiac allograft vasculopathy. Conclusions While operative mortality following cardiac transplantation for adult congenital heart disease is higher than for other diagnostic groups, long-term survival is good and comparable to patients without CHD. Disappointing early results are improved with increasing experience.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

Changing Patterns of Bridging to Heart Transplantation in Children

Jane Cassidy; Simon Haynes; Richard Kirk; David Crossland; Jonathan Smith; Leslie Hamilton; Massimo Griselli; Asif Hasan

BACKGROUND Mechanical support as a bridge to cardiac transplantation in children is an accepted treatment. With improved devices and increasing experience, the length of time that children can be supported has increased. Donor organs remain scarce and there is significant associated morbidity. METHODS Retrospective review of all children offered mechanical support as a bridge to heart transplant over 10 years in one of the two UK pediatric heart transplant centers. Outcomes during the years 1998 to 2002 were compared with outcomes during the years 2003 to 2007. RESULTS Forty children in 41 separate patient episodes received mechanical support as a bridge to transplantation or, in 1 case, to recovery. Survival to transplant or recovery was achieved in 29 of 41 (71%); 26 of 40 children (63%) survived to hospital discharge. Devices used were extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), the Medos HIAA, the Berlin Heart (from November 2005) and the Levitronix ventricular assist device (VAD) from 2007. All 3 children supported with the Levitronix survived to transplant (median duration of support 10 days). Ten of 13 children (77%) supported by the Berlin Heart survived to transplant or recovery (median duration of support 44 days). Four of 7 (57%) children supported using the Medos device survived to transplant (median duration of support 7 days). Neurologic events were the most common cause of death in both eras (1998 to 2002 and 2003 to 2008). CONCLUSIONS Waiting times to pediatric cardiac transplant in the UK have increased. The Berlin Heart allows children to be bridged to transplant over long periods. Neurologic morbidity remains as a major concern.


Cardiology in The Young | 2005

Employment and advice regarding careers for adults with congenital heart disease.

David Crossland; Sue Jackson; Rosalind Lyall; John Burn; John O'Sullivan

AIMS To compare the rates of employment, and advice offered concerning careers, in adults with congenital heart disease and controls. To assess the impact of the severity of the congenital cardiac malformation on the chances for employment. METHODS We solicited responses from 299 adults with congenitally malformed hearts, asking them to answer questions from a questionnaire posed at interview by a trained nurse. The adults were asked to give an identical questionnaire to a friend to act as a control. We received responses from 177 of the controls. RESULTS The responses showed that 51 of 156 (33 per cent) adults with congenital heart disease were unemployed, and 37 of 151 (25 per cent) had been unemployed for more than a year. This is significantly more than 25 of 156 (16 per cent) matched controls unemployed, and 5 of 151 (3 per cent) controls unemployed for more than a year. Almost one-fifth of the adults with congenital heart disease (19 per cent) had received advice regarding their career which they found helpful, which is significantly fewer than the 31 per cent of controls. More (42 per cent) had been given advice against certain occupations than controls (11 per cent). Receiving career advice was significantly associated with employment in the population with congenitally malformed hearts, with almost three-quarters (73 per cent) of those given advice being employed compared to 46 per cent of those not given advice. This pattern was not seen in controls. The severity of the congenital cardiac malformation did not significantly affect the rates of unemployment. CONCLUSIONS Whatever the severity of their disease, adults with congenitally malformed hearts are more likely to be unemployed than matched controls. They are less likely to receive useful advice regarding potential careers, and find the advice given less helpful, than controls, although receiving suitable advice is associated with being employed in the population with congenital cardiac disease.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2016

Fontan-associated liver disease: Implications for heart transplantation

Steven C. Greenway; David Crossland; Mark Hudson; Steven R. Martin; Robert P. Myers; Tim Prieur; Asif Hasan; Richard Kirk

Chronic liver diseases are associated with multiple complications, including cirrhosis, portal hypertension, ascites, synthetic dysfunction and hepatocellular carcinoma, and these processes are increasingly recognized in post-Fontan patients. Fontan-associated liver disease (FALD) can be defined as abnormalities in liver structure and function that result from the Fontan circulation and are not related to another disease process. FALD arises due to chronic congestion of the liver created by the elevated venous pressure and low cardiac output of the Fontan circulation, which may be superimposed on previous liver injury. Pathology studies have generally shown that FALD worsens as time post-Fontan increases, but the prevalence of FALD is not well defined because the majority of Fontan patients, even those with significant hepatic fibrosis, appear to be asymptomatic and biochemical or functional hepatic abnormalities are usually subtle or absent. Alternate non-invasive investigations, derived from the study of other chronic liver diseases, have been tested in small series of pediatric and adult Fontan patients, but they have been confounded by congestion and do not correlate well with liver biopsy findings. Liver disease can complicate Fontan circulatory failure and may even be significant enough to be considered a contraindication to heart transplantation or require combined heart-liver transplantation. The search for the optimal management strategy continues in the setting of increasing numbers of Fontan patients surviving to adulthood and being referred for heart transplantation. Thus, in this review we attempt to define the scope and significance of FALD and address transplant-related assessment and management of this challenging disorder.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

Successful Bridge to Transplant With the Berlin Heart After Cavopulmonary Shunt

Claire Irving; Jane Cassidy; Richard Kirk; Massimo Griselli; Asif Hasan; David Crossland

Mechanical cardiac assistance for infants and children may be accomplished using extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or ventricular assist device support, and are now well established as a bridge to cardiac transplantation or recovery in biventricular hearts, usually in the setting of low cardiac output states due to cardiomyopathy or acute myocarditis. Ventricular assist device support remains less well described in the setting of single ventricle physiology. We report the case of a 3-year-old girl who developed severe right ventricular failure 2 years after cavopulmonary shunt after an initial Stage I Norwood operation for hypoplastic left heart syndrome. She was successfully supported to cardiac transplantation using a single chamber Berlin Heart EXCOR ventricular assist device using right ventricular apex and aortic cannulation and is now well at home 10 months after transplant.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Mechanical cardiac support in children with congenital heart disease with intention to bridge to heart transplantation

Fabrizio De Rita; Asif Hasan; Simon Haynes; David Crossland; Richard Kirk; Lee P. Ferguson; Edward Peng; Massimo Griselli

OBJECTIVES A significant number of children affected by congenital heart disease (CHD) develop heart failure early or late after surgery, and heart transplantation (OHTx) remains the last treatment option. Due to shortage of donor organs in paediatric group, mechanical circulatory support (MCS) is now routinely applied as bridging strategy to increase survival on the waiting list for OTHx. We sought to assess the impact of MCS as intention to bridge to OHTx in patients with CHD less than 16 years of age. METHODS From 1998 to 2013, 106 patients received 113 episodes of MCS with paracorporeal devices as intention to bridge to OHTx. Twenty-nine had CHD, 15 (52%) with two-ventricle (Group A) and 14 (48%) with single-ventricle physiology (Group B). In Group A, 5 children had venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA ECMO), 6 left ventricular assist device (LVAD), 2 biventricular assist device (BIVAD), 1 VA ECMO followed by BIVAD and 1 BIVAD followed by VA ECMO. In Group B, VA ECMO was used in 7 children, univentricular assist device (UVAD) changed to VA ECMO in 4, UVAD in 2 and surgical conversion to two-ventricles physiology with BIVAD support changed to VA ECMO in 1. RESULTS Twenty-one of 29 (72%) children survived to recovery/OHTx. Seven of 29 (59%) survived to discharge. In Group A, 11/15 (73%) survived to recovery/OHTx and 9/15 (60%) survived to discharge. Four of 15 (27%) died awaiting OHTx. One child had graft failure requiring VA ECMO and was bridged successfully to retransplantation. One child dying after OHTx had acute rejection, was supported with VA ECMO and then BIVAD but did not recover. One patient had an unsuccessful second run on BIVAD 1 year after recovery from VA ECMO. In Group B, 10/14 (71%) survived to recovery/OHTx and 8/14 (57%) survived to discharge. Four of 14 (29%) died awaiting OHTx. Of deaths after OHTx, 1 occurred intraoperatively and 1 was consequent to graft failure and had an unsuccessful second run with VA ECMO. CONCLUSIONS Children with CHD can be successfully bridged with MCS to heart transplantation. Single-ventricle circulation compared with biventricular physiology does not increase the risk of death before transplant or before hospital discharge.


Transplantation | 2008

Recovery of Heart Function in Children With Acute Severe Heart Failure

John O'Sullivan; Susan L. Roche; David Crossland; Milind Chaudhari; Richard Kirk; Hasan Asif

Background. The prognosis of acute heart failure is such that many children are considered for transplantation. Recovery of severe heart failure in a proportion of patients diagnosed with either dilated cardiomyopathy or myocarditis is well recognized, and this complicates the assessment for transplantation. There is little data on the time scale of recovery of heart function in children. Objectives. To describe the time course over which echocardiographic improvement of systolic function occurred in a cohort of children who presented in acute heart failure, without structural or metabolic abnormality. Methods. Children with a first presentation of acute severe heart failure between 1990 and 2005. Time from presentation to the echocardiogram before left ventricular fractional shortening (FS) improved to 20% and 30% (complete recovery) was recorded. Results. Twenty-seven children (11 male) were identified, and all had an initial FS <15%. Twenty-one patients required intravenous inotropes and three patients required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Seven patients had been on the active transplant list for a mean duration of 155 days. Four patients had probable viral myocarditis. Mean age at presentation was 15.7 (range, 0.1–72) months. Mean time to an FS of 20% was 3.6 (0.2–18) months and to 30% was 8.9 (0.7–24) months. Complete recovery occurred within 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months of presentation in 44%, 55%, 66%, and 96%, respectively. There was no correlation between age of presentation and length of time to recovery. Conclusions. Complete recovery of left ventricular systolic function is often delayed to more than 1 year from presentation. This may have major implications for timing of transplantation in an era where prolonged mechanical cardiac support is feasible even in infants.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

Successful Bridge to Recovery With 120 Days of Mechanical Support in an Infant With Myocarditis

Caroline B. Jones; Jane Cassidy; Richard Kirk; Fiona Black; Massimo Griselli; Asif Hasan; David Crossland

An 8-month-old boy with acute myocarditis was mechanically supported with the Berlin Heart EXCOR biventricular assist device. Signs of myocardial recovery were not apparent until 40 days from presentation and ventricular function continued to improve with device removal possible after 120 days of support. He had normal cardiac function 3 months after device removal. Recovery from myocarditis in infants can take much longer than previously recognized and an extended wait for recovery is possible with the Berlin Heart.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2014

Patent foramen ovale closure with the Gore septal occluder: initial UK experience.

John Thomson; David Hildick-Smith; Paul Clift; Gareth J. Morgan; Matthew J. Daniels; Robert Henderson; Mark S. Spence; Vaikom S. Mahadevan; David Crossland; Oliver Ormerod

To report procedural outcome and short‐term follow‐up data for the Gore septal occluder (GSO), a new device for closure of patent foramen ovale (PFO).


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2013

Is alternative cardiac surgery an option in adults with congenital heart disease referred for thoracic organ transplantation

Andrew Robert Harper; David Crossland; Gianluigi Perri; John O'Sullivan; Milind Chaudhari; Stephan Schueler; Massimo Griselli; Asif Hasan

OBJECTIVES We analysed the outcomes of adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) referred for thoracic organ transplantation who underwent non-transplant cardiac surgery as an alternative management option. METHODS Adult patients with congenital heart disease assessed for heart or heart-lung transplant were identified from the departmental database. A retrospective analysis of the medical records, transplant assessment data and surgical notes was carried out. RESULTS One hundred and twenty-six patients were assessed between January 2000 and July 2011. Non-transplant cardiac surgery was performed in 14 (11%) patients. There were nine males with a median age of 37 years (range 21-42). The patients can be divided into four subgroups [left-sided lesions (n = 4), right-sided lesions (n = 3), systemic right ventricle (n = 5) and Fontan circulation (n = 2)]. Surgical procedures performed were: relief of systemic obstructive/regurgitant lesions ± endocardial fibroelastosis resection (n = 4, three pulmonary vascular resistance >6 Wood units), correction of right-sided regurgitant/stenotic lesions (n = 3), ventricular assist device for patients with a systemic right ventricle (n = 5) and re-fashioning of the Fontan pathway (n = 2). There were two early (5 and 30 days) and three late deaths (64, 232 and 374 days) with a 1-year mortality of 28%. None of the deaths occurred in patients with a two-ventricle circulation and atrio-ventricular concordance. Nine patients are alive at a median of 433 days (range 204-2456). The New York Heart Association class has improved in all survivors by at least one class at 3 and 6 months (P = 0.004 and 0.003). CONCLUSIONS Alternative cardiac surgery can be undertaken in selected patients with ACHD referred for cardiopulmonary transplantation with a low mortality in patients with two ventricles and a systemic left ventricle. Ventricular assist devices carry a significant mortality in patients with a systemic right ventricle, although this offers a valuable palliation when there are no other options. The medium and long-term results are awaited.

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Gareth Parry

Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology

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