International Fetal Cardiac Intervention Registry: A Worldwide Collaborative Description and Preliminary Outcomes
Invasive fetal cardiac intervention (FCI) has been reported in single-institution series, promoting technical and physiologic success. This study describes the creation of an international registry of cases presenting for FCI, intended to compile technical and outcome data from a multicenter cohort....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2015-07, Vol.66 (4), p.388-399 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Invasive fetal cardiac intervention (FCI) has been reported in single-institution series, promoting technical and physiologic success.
This study describes the creation of an international registry of cases presenting for FCI, intended to compile technical and outcome data from a multicenter cohort.
For this initial analysis, the entire database of the International Fetal Cardiac Intervention Registry (IFCIR) was queried for details of diagnoses, procedures, and outcomes. Maternal-fetal dyads from January 2001 through June 2014 were included.
Eighteen institutions submitted data by data harvest. Of 370 cases entered, 245 underwent FCI: 100 aortic valvuloplasties from a previous single-center report (excluded from additional reporting here), an additional 86 aortic and 16 pulmonary valvuloplasties, 37 atrial septal cases, and 6 unclassified cases. FCI did not appear to affect overall survival to hospital discharge. Among live-born infants with a fetal diagnosis of aortic stenosis/evolving hypoplastic left heart syndrome, more than twice as many were discharged with biventricular circulation after successful FCI versus those meeting institutional criteria but without any or successful FCI (42.8% vs. 19.4%, respectively). When fetal deaths were counted as treatment failures, the percentages were similar: biventricular circulation at discharge was 31.3% versus 18.5% for those discharged with univentricular palliation. Survival to discharge for live-born fetuses with atrial restriction was similar to that of those undergoing technically successful versus unsuccessful FCI (63.6% vs. 46.7%, respectively), although criteria for diagnosis were nonuniform.
We describe the contents of the IFCIR and present post-natal data to suggest potential benefit to fetal therapy among pregnancies considered for possible intervention and support proposals for additional work. |
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ISSN: | 1558-3597 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jacc.2015.05.037 |