Impact of Ventricular Dominance on Long-Term Fontan Outcomes: A 25-year Single-institution Study

The long-term impact of ventricular dominance on Fontan outcomes is controversial. This study examined this issue in a 25-year cohort. Patients undergoing the Fontan operation at a single institution (Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC) from October 1998 to February 2022 were reviewed. Prima...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Annals of thoracic surgery 2023-09, Vol.116 (3), p.508-515
Hauptverfasser: Thornton, Steven W., Meza, James M., Prabhu, Neel K., Kang, Lillian, Moya-Mendez, Mary E., Parker, Lauren E., Fleming, Gregory A., Turek, Joseph W., Andersen, Nicholas D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The long-term impact of ventricular dominance on Fontan outcomes is controversial. This study examined this issue in a 25-year cohort. Patients undergoing the Fontan operation at a single institution (Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC) from October 1998 to February 2022 were reviewed. Primary outcomes were transplant-free survival and Fontan failure (death, heart transplantation, takedown, protein-losing enteropathy, or plastic bronchitis). Secondary outcomes included hospital and intensive care lengths of stay. Kaplan-Meier methodology compared outcomes by ventricular dominance. Multiphase parametric risk hazard analysis identified risk factors for primary outcomes. There were 195 patients (104 right ventricular dominant) included in the study. Baseline characteristics were comparable. Perioperative survival was similar (right ventricular dominant, 98%; non–right ventricular dominant, 100%; P = .51). The proportion of patients experiencing death or heart transplantation was 8.7%, and the rate of Fontan failure was 11.8% during a median follow-up of 4.5 years (interquartile range, 0.3-9.8 years). Right ventricular–dominant patients had reduced transplant-free survival (10-year estimates: 80% [95% CI, 70%-91%] vs 92% [95% CI, 83%-100%]; P = .04) and freedom from Fontan failure (73% [95% CI, 62%-86%] vs 92% [95% CI, 83%-100%]; P = .04). Multiphase hazard modeling resolved 2 risk phases. The early phase spanned from surgery to approximately 6 months afterward. The late phase spanned from approximately 6 months after surgery onward. In multivariable analysis, right ventricular dominance was an independent risk factor for death or heart transplantation (parameter estimate, 1.3 ± 0.6; P = .04) and Fontan failure (1.1 ± 0.5; P = .04) during the second phase, with no significant first-phase risk factors. Right ventricular dominance was associated with long-term complications after Fontan procedures, including mortality, heart transplantation, and Fontan failure. This cohort may benefit from heightened surveillance in a multidisciplinary Fontan clinic after the perioperative period. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0003-4975
1552-6259
DOI:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2022.11.039