Browsing Tag

transplant

Nephrology

Continual Performance Improvement in Pediatric Kidney Transplantation

The renal transplant team at Children’s of Alabama has performed more than 500 kidney transplants since 1968. To this day, continuous improvement remains at the heart of everything it does.

The hospital is part of the Improving Renal Outcomes Collaborative (IROC), a learning health system of 32 pediatric kidney transplant centers in the U.S. that share data and best practices in an effort to improve transplant outcomes.

“We know we can achieve better things more efficiently together than if we’re working individually,” said Children’s pediatric nephrologist Michael E. Seifert, M.D. 

Improvement Projects

One recent project involved improving blood pressure assessments. “We know that if we control blood pressure we get better patient outcomes and the transplant does better,” Seifert said. Yet an analysis of 17 IROC transplant centers found that blood pressure was being measured appropriately based on current guidelines at just 12% of transplant clinic visits.

Each IROC center had the freedom to design custom tools to fit its needs for improving blood pressure measurement. The answer at Children’s was paper-based tracking logs and regular meetings to review progress. The team also educated all staff on the importance of measuring blood pressure and how to measure it according to the most recent guidelines. “It was pretty simple things that, when applied systematically and consistently, led to prolonged improvement,” Seifert said. Today, at least 85% of clinic visits include an appropriately measured blood pressure and the team is working to improve that number.

The next project is to improve adherence to immunosuppressive drugs, a major risk factor for rejection and loss of the kidney transplant. The team is developing a questionnaire for parents and patients so they can identify the barriers to adherence and develop targeted interventions. “We have to get away from an accusatory approach to a partnership and ask, ‘How can we work with you to make it easier to take your medications?’” Seifert said.

Children’s is also a national leader in studying surveillance biopsies to help reduce acute rejection rates. Most pediatric transplant centers do not perform early surveillance biopsies at pre-specified time points because of their invasive nature, but Seifert and his team demonstrated that surveillance biopsies in the first six months after transplant can detect subclinical inflammation, which is associated with a nearly threefold increased risk of acute rejection and allograft failure. Treating patients who demonstrated such inflammation, they recently reported, significantly reduces that risk. Importantly, they also demonstrated that the  surveillance biopsy procedure was safe for pediatric patients, with extremely low rates of mild adverse events.

Bringing the Bench and the Clinic Closer

The transplant team also runs a robust translational research program, with half of transplant patients enrolled in at least one research study. One is a biorepository study in which patients’ blood, urine and kidney biopsy tissue is collected throughout and after the transplant process. “Then we can develop biomarkers of kidney transplant diseases that impact the survival of the transplant,” Seifert said.

The second study will identify determinants of cardiovascular health in pediatric and young adult kidney transplant recipients who have a high burden of cardiovascular risk. “Transplantation improves but doesn’t eliminate this risk,” Seifert said. “This study is

designed to understand certain unique cardiovascular risk factors, such as the impact of

early life stress, on cardiovascular and renal outcomes.”

The Transplant Experts

Learn more about kidney transplantation at Children’s of Alabama.

Cardiology

Thanks to Team-Oriented Approach, Heart Transplant Program Leads Country in Outcomes

transplant_team

The Pediatric Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant Team at Children’s Alabama, seated, left to right: Sally Smith, DNP, CRNP, CCTC; Meloneysa Hubbard, MSN, CRNP, CCTC; and Kimberly Sullivan, MSN, CCTC, CRNP. Standing, left to right: Mariah Strickland, MSN, CRNP; Waldemar F. Carlo, M.D.; David C. Mauchley, M.D.; F. Bennett Pearce, M.D; and Robert J. Dabal, M.D.

The numbers tell the story of the heart transplant program at Children’s of Alabama.

• 176 pediatric heart transplants since 1981
• 59 transplants since 2012
• Zero deaths since 2014
• A 97 percent one-year survival rate over the last decade — considerably higher than the national rate of 90.2 percent

One major reason? “We have a very cohesive, experienced, stable team,” said Medical Director F. Bennett Pearce, M.D. That team includes surgical director Robert J. Dabal, M.D., pediatric cardiologist Waldemar F. Carlo, M.D., and pediatric surgeon David C. Mauchley, M.D., as well as four cardiac nurse practitioners, three of whom are certified clinical transplant coordinators.

Until 2012, the pediatric transplant program was housed at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). But with the opening of the new children’s hospital that year, the transplant team was able to create a separate entity and move into a state-of-the-art cardiac care facility at Children’s. Today, it serves as a regional referral center and is the only pediatric heart transplant program in the state. The program also provides comprehensive care for patients with advanced heart failure using evidence-based medical management and mechanical circulatory support. Its surgeons also perform heart transplants, including ABO incompatible transplants, in infants.

Although the United Network of Organ Sharing (UNOS) considers the Children’s program to be a relatively young program, Pearce said, “the reality is far different” given the team’s depth and length of experience. The team is also diverse, he said, bringing different viewpoints and interests, which expands the program’s potential.

Moving to Children’s brought several advantages, he said, particularly access to pediatric specialists. “We can provide better multidisciplinary care for patients,” he said. The program also now has its own administrative structure and identity, providing families with a central place to call with questions or concerns.

The center also features dedicated social workers, child life therapists, physical/occupational therapists, dietary counselors, psychosocial counselors, specialty pharmacists and pastoral care. “We realize that when a patient is listed for transplant that you’re entering into a relationship the family as well as the patient,” Pearce said, “and we do all we can to optimize that relationship.”

Research is a major part of the program, he said, with ongoing studies on cardiomyopathy, pulmonary hypertension and heart transplantation. For instance, one major study is evaluating alternative immune suppression techniques for post-transplant children. The center also participates in numerous quality initiatives with other transplant programs around the country in order to identify best practices.

Largest Pediatric Heart Transplant Registry in the World

UAB houses the international Pediatric Heart Transplant Society, which maintains the largest registry in the world on heart transplantation. Data from the registry is used to encourage and stimulate basic and clinical research in the field of pediatric heart transplantation and to promote new therapeutic strategies. Since its founding in 1993, data from the registry has been used to produce more than 100 abstracts and presentations, and 87 publications. Today, 56 centers participate in the registry, which contains information on more than 6,542 transplants. James Kirklin, M.D., who was surgical director of Adult and Pediatric Heart Transplant program at UAB and Children’s until his retirement from clinical work in 2017, initiated the registry.

Cardiology Heart Transplant Chart

The Heart of It All
Visit www.childrensal.org/advanced-heart-failure-and-transplant to learn more about the Pediatric Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant team at Children’s of Alabama.