Destination therapy

Destination therapy is a therapy that is final rather than being a transitional stage until another therapy—thus, in transportation metaphor, a destination in itself rather than merely a bridge or road to the destination.[1] The term usually refers to ventricular assist devices or mechanical circulatory support to keep the existing heart going, not just until a heart transplant can occur, but for the rest of the patient's life expectancy. It is thus a course of treatment for severe (e.g., NYHA class IV/ACC stage D) heart failure patients who are not likely candidates for transplant. In contrast, bridge-to-transplant therapy is a way to stay alive long enough, and stay healthy enough, to await transplant while maintaining eligibility for transplant.

Heart failure is a leading cause of death in industrialized economies. Among those with serious heart illness some are, for a variety of possible medical circumstances, ineligible for a heart transplant. Destination therapy provides a possibility to extend their lives and improve their quality of life.[2][3]

In addition, destination therapy may in some cases turn out to remedy the condition that excluded transplantation[4]

Estimates place the population in the United States that may benefit from destination therapy at 50,000 – 100,000 patients per year. The addressable population outside of the US is thought be similar in size.

  1. ^ Birks, EJ; Bogaev, RC (2011), "A changing trend toward destination therapy: are we treating the same patients differently?", Tex Heart Inst J, 38 (5): 552–554, PMC 3231550, PMID 22163133.
  2. ^ "Cardiovascular disease: prevention and control". World Health Organization. Archived from the original on May 25, 2004.
  3. ^ "Heart Failure". American Heart Association. 2009-10-27.
  4. ^ Choong, Cliff; Michael Pasque; Kim Shelton; et al. (2005-02-10). "The beneficial role of left ventricular assist device destination therapy in the reversal of contraindications to cardiac transplantation". The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. 130 (3): 879–880. doi:10.1016/j.jtcvs.2005.02.014. PMID 16153944.