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Cardiac transplantation at Stanford.
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1977
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Transplantation SurgeryHeart FailureTransplantationCardiac Allograft RecipientsCardiovascular DiseaseAcute Graft RejectionAtherosclerosisCardiac XenotransplantationGraft SurvivalCardiac TransplantationMedicineCardiologyHeart TransplantationYear SurvivalCardiothoracic Surgery
Increasing survival of cardiac allograft recipients has been noted with each year of the Stanford cardiac transplantation program. Current 1 year survival is 67%, compared with 22% 1 year survival in the first year of our program. Five factors are felt to be important in improving survival: 1 degree stringent recipient selection criteria, 2 degrees routine use of serial endomyocardial biopsies for the diagnosis of acute graft rejection, 3 degrees administration of rabbit antithymocyte globulin for the treatment of rejection, 4 degrees aggressive diagnosis and treatment of infectious complications, and 5 degrees reduction of the incidence of accelerated graft arteriosclerosis by appropriate prophylaxis.