Pediatric Heart Transplant Paradox: More Survivors, Fewer Donor Hearts

May 24, 2026
  • heart.gif
    How can we bridge the gap between life-saving medical breakthroughs and the global heart organ shortage? While innovations like ventricular assist devices (VADs) help more children survive long enough to wait for a match, the supply of donor hearts has not kept pace. ()

    Experts highlighted a concerning contradiction in pediatric heart transplant care in the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) 46th Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions 2026. This critical donor heart shortage means waitlist mortality remains high.

    To save more lives, surgeons are moving toward an expanded donor pool, utilizing near-ideal hearts and better organ preservation tech. Improving pediatric cardiology and updating organ allocation policy are essential steps to ensuring that medical progress actually results in more successful pediatric heart transplants for children in need.

    While Allocation Policy Matters, It Cannot Solve the Pediatric Heart Transplant Organ Shortage

    Kevin P. Daly, MD, a Pediatric Cardiologist at Boston Children�s Hospital, said breaking the bottleneck in the U.S. Transplant Modernization Act would help the flow of donor hearts to recipients.

    Implementation of the modernization act, which has been slowed by federal contracting delays, would allow committees to continue work on a proposed shift from a categorical system to a continuous distribution model that better prioritizes medical urgency and system efficiency.

    With additional allocation points for children and refinements to pediatric urgency categories, the new system would also give children higher priority. �Allocation policy matters, but it cannot solve a shortage of organs,� said Dr. Daly, president of the Pediatric Heart Transplant Society.

    Saving Children on the Waiting List, but Lacking Donor Hearts

    Globally, more than 600 pediatric heart transplants are performed each year, yet waiting list mortality remains high. In the United States, more than 1 in 6 children on the waiting list do not survive. At the same time, advances such as ventricular assist devices are allowing critically ill children to live longer while awaiting transplant�often for months or years.

    �That is the paradox,� said Brigitte Stiller, MD, Professor and Head of Pediatric Cardiology at University Heart Center Freiburg in Germany. �We are saving children on the waiting list, but we are not finding enough donor hearts for them.�

    Dr. Stiller argued that the field must rethink how donor hearts are selected and used. �Scarcity in pediatric heart transplantation is not fate, it is a problem we can redesign,� she said.

    Donation After Circulatory Death (DCD): A Promising yet Limited Tool in Pediatric Heart Transplantation

    One key shift involves moving beyond the idea of the �perfect� donor heart. As children become more stable on mechanical support, clinicians may often be reluctant to accept anything less than an ideal donor heart�potentially prolonging wait times.

    �There is growing evidence that carefully selected hearts can still lead to excellent outcomes,� Dr. Stiller said. �If we wait only for the ideal donor, some children will never receive a transplant.�

    Both speakers said technological advances are needed to expand the donor heart pool, including organ perfusion and preservation technologies. In the United States, miniaturized perfusion platforms are currently being evaluated in clinical trials.

    �These systems would be revolutionary, just as they have already re-shaped adult heart transplantation,� Dr. Daly said.

    Donation After Circulatory Death (DCD) is another promising approach, though its use in pediatric transplantation remains limited. Experts emphasized that maintaining public trust will be essential as these practices expand.

    �Public trust is everything,� Dr. Daly said. �If families lose confidence in the system, donation rates could fall, and that would cost lives.� Clinical innovations are also making a difference. Infants and young children can safely receive hearts from donors with incompatible blood types�a breakthrough that significantly increases the number of available donor organs.

    Promoting Public Awareness to Solve the Pediatric Donor Heart Shortage

    Beyond policy and technology, Dr. Stiller stressed the importance of helping the public understand the long-lasting effects of transplantation and the importance of organ donation. She said many pediatric heart recipients grow up to live full, healthy lives, finish school, build careers, and start families.

    �When people see that these children become thriving adults, it changes the conversation,� she said. �That visibility can help more families say yes to organ donation.� Both speakers agreed that solving the pediatric donor shortage will require a multi-pronged effort.

    �There is not just one solution, but many: technology, clinical innovation, and a willingness to rethink how we use every donor heart,� said Dr. Stiller.

    Reference:
    1. International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) 46th Annual Meeting & Scientific Sessions: Scientific Program. - (https:www.ishlt.org/annual-meeting/science-collaboration/program)


    Source-Eurekalert

    Bookmark and Share

Post Your Comments
* Your Email address will not be displayed on the site or used to send unsolicited e-mails.
( Max 1000 Words )

Search

News Archives

Select Month and Year