Daily Express

HEART DISEASE BREAKTHROU­GH

New pump helps patients to make amazing recovery

- By Mark Lister

BRITISH doctors last night hailed a medical procedure which sees patients with severe heart disease recover full fitness – without the need for a transplant.

Nearly two-fifths of sufferers went on to make a full recovery when they were given the mechanical pump.

A national shortage of donated hearts for transplant is leading to calls for the batteryope­rated machines to be considered as a tool which can allow patients to fully restore their health.

The pumps are currently used to support patients with severe heart failure while they wait for a transplant.

A spokesman for the team at Newcastle University Dr Djordje Jakovljevi­c said: “For the first time, what we have shown is that heart function is restored in some patients to the extent that they are just like someone

healthy who has never had heart disease,” he said.

He added: “We talk about these devices as a bridge-to-transplant, something which can keep a patient alive until a heart is available for transplant­ation.”

But the ground-breaking research showed how some patients were able to recover to such an extent that they no longer need the transplant.

“In effect, these devices can be a bridge to full recovery in some patients,” said Dr Jakovljevi­c.

The researcher­s examined the effect of mechanical heart pumps, known as left ventricula­r assist devices (LVADs).

Surgeons implant the machine, which helps the main pumping chamber of the heart – the left ventricle – to push blood around the body.

Fitted at the six specialist NHS centres across Britain, LVADs are used for patients who have reached the end stage of heart failure.

Publishing in the Journal Of American College Of Cardiology, the team explained the clinical trial, where 58 men with heart failure were tested for their heart fitness levels.

Of those, 16 were fitted with an LVAD and then had it removed due to their recovery.

Eighteen still had an LVAD and 24 patients were waiting for a heart transplant.

On average, a patient had a device fitted for 396 days before it was removed.

The participan­ts were compared with 97 healthy men who had no known heart disease.

Encouragin­g

The authors said 38 per cent of people who recovered enough to allow the device to be removed demonstrat­ed a heart function equivalent to that of a healthy individual of the same age.

Dr Jakovljevi­c said: “We can consider these pumps as a tool which can lead to a patient recovering, rather than as a device which keeps people alive until a heart transplant is available.”

Now the team is researchin­g markers that will indicate if and when to remove the pumps while ensuring heart failure will not occur again.

The average price of a LVAD is around £80,000 and the transplant operation costs £69,000.

Dr Guy MacGowan, consultant cardiologi­st within the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, and Honorary Clinical Reader in Heart Failure at Newcastle University, is co-author of the paper.

He said: “It is very difficult to get a heart transplant, especially in the UK, so any alternativ­e treatment is important and recovery of heart function especially so.”

Cardiovasc­ular (heart and circulator­y) disease causes 26 per cent of all deaths in the UK, with nearly 160,000 deaths each year.

Professor Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, said: “This research is extremely encouragin­g and shows there may, finally, be hope for people who are living with advanced heart failure. But it’s vital we continue funding research into repairing damaged hearts.”

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