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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

The impact of body composition on peri-operative and patient-centered outcomes in lung transplantation.

$4.19M USD

Funder NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of California, San Francisco
Country United States
Start Date Aug 05, 2022
End Date Jul 31, 2027
Duration 1,821 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10899478
Grant Description

PROJECT ABSTRACT Lung transplantation aims to extend survival, relieve disability, and improve health-related quality of life (HRQL). Although many do well, perioperative complications have increased, one third of patients die within the first three post-transplant years and 20-40% of survivors do not report improvements in patient-reported outcomes (PROs)

such as functioning and HRQL. Reasons for this lack of improvement are generally unknown. As a result, RFA- 022-002 highlights body composition and PROs as key priority areas for further investigation and intervention. In earlier work using BMI, CT scans, and DXA, our group showed that obesity and sarcopenia are prevalent in lung

transplant candidates and are risk factors for frailty, primary graft dysfunction (PGD), and mortality. We also highlighted, the challenges to more widely implementing these modalities and introduced bioelectrical impedance (BIA) as a method of advanced body composition quantification that overcomes these challenges. We

demonstrated that obesity and sarcopenia by BIA are risk factors for PGD, and wait-list death. Our preliminary data suggests that sarcopenic obesity may be a novel phenotype at heightened risk for perioperative complications. After transplant, PGD and other perioperative complications contribute to disability, poor HRQL,

and death after transplant. Despite the clinical primacy of PROs, the only empirical data on the impact of perioperative complications on PROs comes from our single-center work. Data on which PROs are responsive to perioperative complications is lacking, hindering informed selection of PROs for use in future research. Finally,

defining the factors and events from before through early after transplant that impact PROs can identify and prioritize targets for intervention and improve clinical trial efficiency through prognostic enrichment. To address these problems, we will enroll 803 lung transplant candidates and, in Aim 1, will define the impact of sarcopenic

obesity, sarcopenia, and adiposity on peri-operative and PROs at 6-months. We hypothesize that sarcopenic obesity will confer heightened risk for perioperative complications, including PGD, even in patients with normal BMI. In Aim 2, we will define the responsiveness of PRO measures to PGD and other perioperative

complications. Aim 2 will provide the foundational empirical data needed to inform appropriate PRO selection for future observational and interventional studies. Aim 3, will develop landmark prediction models accounting for pre-, peri- and early post-operative factors to identify groups with worse post-operative PROs at 6-months and time

to graft failure up to 3-years after transplant. Developing new modeling of peri- and early post-operative outcomes to predict which individuals are at risk for poor outcomes will inform the prognostic enrichment strategies needed to improve clinical trial efficiency in lung transplant. In sum, we address key priorities in RFA HL-22-022 by

examining body composition in an innovative and scalable manner; identifying high yield PROs for future studies and generating foundational knowledge to inform future studies and trials in lung transplantation.

All Grantees

University of California, San Francisco

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