Coronary artery disease has emerged as the leading cause of late morbidity and mortality in heart transplant recipients. The incidence of allograft coronary artery disease has been reported to be as high as 40% to 50% by 5 years. Coronary angiography remains the standard approach for surveillance of coronary artery disease in this patient population. However, the detection and surveillance of allograft coronary disease by noninvasive methods remains a challenge. The purpose of this study was to determine the value of dobutamine stress echocardiography as a noninvasive screening test to rule out the presence of anatomically significant allograft coronary artery disease and to assess its prognostic power. Dobutamine stress echocardiography was carried out according to a standard protocol in which dobutamine was infused at 5, 10, 20, 30, and 40 mug/kg/min intravenously at 5-minute stages with 12-lead electrocardiogram and blood pressure monitoring. Left ventricular wall motion was analyzed at baseline and at peak dobutamine dose. Mean age (+/- standard error of the mean) of the study population was 50.5 +/- 1.5 years, and mean duration (+/- standard error of the mean) since transplantation was 57 +/- 5 months. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive accuracy of dobutamine stress echocardiography were 95%, 55%, 69%, and 92%, respectively. In the 12-month follow-up study 12 patients with abnormal dobutamine stress echocardiographic findings had 15 major cardiac events whereas no event occurred in patients with normal dobutamine stress echocardiograms. Peak wall motion score index was significantly higher (1.8 +/- 0.01 versus 1.5 +/- 0.06) in patients with cardiac events compared with those without events. These findings indicate that dobutamine stress echocardiography is an excellent noninvasive screening test with high predictive accuracy to rule out the presence of anatomically significant allograft coronary artery disease. Follow-up observational data suggest a potential role of this test in predicting short-term prognosis in heart transplant recipients.