Congenital Heart Surgery Databases Around the World: Do We Need a Global Database?
The question posed in the title of this article is: “Congenital Heart Surgery Databases Around the World: Do We Need a Global Database?” The answer to this question is “Yes and No”! Yes - we need to create a global database to track the outcomes of patients with pediatric and congenital heart diseas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Seminars in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery. Pediatric cardiac surgery annual 2010, Vol.13 (1), p.3-19 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The question posed in the title of this article is: “Congenital Heart Surgery Databases Around the World: Do We Need a Global Database?” The answer to this question is “Yes and No”! Yes - we need to create a global database to track the outcomes of patients with pediatric and congenital heart disease. No–we do not need to create a new “global database.” Instead, we need to create a platform that allows for the linkage of currently existing continental subspecialty databases (and continental subspecialty databases that might be created in the future) that will allow for the seamless sharing of multi-institutional longitudinal data across temporal, geographical, and subspecialty boundaries. This review article will achieve the following objectives: (A) Consider the current state of analysis of outcomes of treatments for patients with congenitally malformed hearts. (B) Present some principles that might make it possible to achieve life-long longitudinal monitoring and follow-up. (C) Describe the rationale for the creation of a Global Federated Multispecialty Congenital Heart Disease Database. (D) Propose a methodology for the creation of a Global Federated Multispecialty Congenital Heart Disease Database that is based on linking together currently existing databases without creating a new database. To perform meaningful multi-institutional analyses, any database must incorporate the following six essential elements: (1) Use of a common language and nomenclature. (2) Use of a database with an established uniform core dataset for collection of information. (3) Incorporation of a mechanism to evaluate the complexity of cases. (4) Implementation of a mechanism to assure and verify the completeness and accuracy of the data collected. (5) Collaboration between medical and surgical subspecialties. (6) Standardization of protocols for life-long longitudinal follow-up. Analysis of outcomes must move beyond recording 30-day or hospital mortality, and encompass longer-term follow-up, including cardiac and non-cardiac morbidities, and importantly, those morbidities impacting health-related quality of life. Methodologies must be implemented in our databases to allow uniform, protocol-driven, and meaningful long-term follow-up. We need to create a platform that allows for the linkage of currently existing continental subspecialty databases (and continental subspecialty databases that might be created in the future) that will allow for the seamless sharing of multi-institut |
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ISSN: | 1092-9126 |
DOI: | 10.1053/j.pcsu.2010.02.003 |