Severe hypoplastic left heart syndrome: palliative care after prenatal diagnosis

We analyzed 16 cases of hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) submitted to the multidisciplinary center at Rennes Teaching Hospital from 2006 to 2010 for prenatal diagnosis. The information given to parents at the moment of choice is capital for them to make their own decision: in our team the real...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives de pédiatrie : organe officiel de la Société française de pédiatrie 2012-04, Vol.19 (4), p.374-380
Hauptverfasser: Noseda, C, Mialet-Marty, T, Basquin, A, Letourneur, I, Bertorello, I, Charlot, F, Le Bouar, G, Bétrémieux, P
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container_title Archives de pédiatrie : organe officiel de la Société française de pédiatrie
container_volume 19
creator Noseda, C
Mialet-Marty, T
Basquin, A
Letourneur, I
Bertorello, I
Charlot, F
Le Bouar, G
Bétrémieux, P
description We analyzed 16 cases of hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) submitted to the multidisciplinary center at Rennes Teaching Hospital from 2006 to 2010 for prenatal diagnosis. The information given to parents at the moment of choice is capital for them to make their own decision: in our team the real choice for parents stands between termination of pregnancy (TOP) and palliative care (PC). The Norwood procedure is rarely proposed to parents in France and it is performed in very few centers. Heart transplant is never proposed nor done at this age. The objectives of our study were to understand the reasons for the choice of PC, take stock of our experience of PC, and relate the benefits but also the disadvantages of PC. Over the 16 patients whose fetus had HLHS, 9 requested TOP, while 7 others wanted to live their pregnancy and meet their child at birth, therefore requesting neonatal PC. No family asked for the Norwood procedure. Four children died within the first days (D1, D2, D4, D9), 2 others died at 5 and 7 months, 1 child was operated on for coarctation of the aorta (unknown before birth) and is still alive 1.5 years later. Maternal motivations to continue the pregnancy were clearly described for 2 of the 7 cases: religious prohibition of TOP in 1 case, negative experiences of previous abortions in the second case. In another case, the parents hesitated between PC and Norwood surgery. For the other women, the reasons were less clearly expressed. In our series, HLHS is the first indication for PC from prenatal diagnosis (7/16 cases in the same period) while in the literature, heart diseases are the second cause of TOP after the neurological causes. The overrepresentation of this pathology in the families who opt for PC may be due to the unconscious image that both professionals and families have of HLHS: severity of an inevitably fatal disease, rapid postnatal death, and no suffering. Our study may change this view: a child was in fact carrying a curable defect which was discovered 12 days after birth, 2 children died at 5 and 7 months, and 5 of 6 children had major analgesics at the end of life. Nevertheless, the families were supported and followed by the PC network, except 1 who ruptured all contacts in a context of presumed intense suffering, but the other 6 do not regret their choice despite the difficulties.
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The information given to parents at the moment of choice is capital for them to make their own decision: in our team the real choice for parents stands between termination of pregnancy (TOP) and palliative care (PC). The Norwood procedure is rarely proposed to parents in France and it is performed in very few centers. Heart transplant is never proposed nor done at this age. The objectives of our study were to understand the reasons for the choice of PC, take stock of our experience of PC, and relate the benefits but also the disadvantages of PC. Over the 16 patients whose fetus had HLHS, 9 requested TOP, while 7 others wanted to live their pregnancy and meet their child at birth, therefore requesting neonatal PC. No family asked for the Norwood procedure. Four children died within the first days (D1, D2, D4, D9), 2 others died at 5 and 7 months, 1 child was operated on for coarctation of the aorta (unknown before birth) and is still alive 1.5 years later. Maternal motivations to continue the pregnancy were clearly described for 2 of the 7 cases: religious prohibition of TOP in 1 case, negative experiences of previous abortions in the second case. In another case, the parents hesitated between PC and Norwood surgery. For the other women, the reasons were less clearly expressed. In our series, HLHS is the first indication for PC from prenatal diagnosis (7/16 cases in the same period) while in the literature, heart diseases are the second cause of TOP after the neurological causes. The overrepresentation of this pathology in the families who opt for PC may be due to the unconscious image that both professionals and families have of HLHS: severity of an inevitably fatal disease, rapid postnatal death, and no suffering. Our study may change this view: a child was in fact carrying a curable defect which was discovered 12 days after birth, 2 children died at 5 and 7 months, and 5 of 6 children had major analgesics at the end of life. 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Maternal motivations to continue the pregnancy were clearly described for 2 of the 7 cases: religious prohibition of TOP in 1 case, negative experiences of previous abortions in the second case. In another case, the parents hesitated between PC and Norwood surgery. For the other women, the reasons were less clearly expressed. In our series, HLHS is the first indication for PC from prenatal diagnosis (7/16 cases in the same period) while in the literature, heart diseases are the second cause of TOP after the neurological causes. The overrepresentation of this pathology in the families who opt for PC may be due to the unconscious image that both professionals and families have of HLHS: severity of an inevitably fatal disease, rapid postnatal death, and no suffering. Our study may change this view: a child was in fact carrying a curable defect which was discovered 12 days after birth, 2 children died at 5 and 7 months, and 5 of 6 children had major analgesics at the end of life. 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The information given to parents at the moment of choice is capital for them to make their own decision: in our team the real choice for parents stands between termination of pregnancy (TOP) and palliative care (PC). The Norwood procedure is rarely proposed to parents in France and it is performed in very few centers. Heart transplant is never proposed nor done at this age. The objectives of our study were to understand the reasons for the choice of PC, take stock of our experience of PC, and relate the benefits but also the disadvantages of PC. Over the 16 patients whose fetus had HLHS, 9 requested TOP, while 7 others wanted to live their pregnancy and meet their child at birth, therefore requesting neonatal PC. No family asked for the Norwood procedure. Four children died within the first days (D1, D2, D4, D9), 2 others died at 5 and 7 months, 1 child was operated on for coarctation of the aorta (unknown before birth) and is still alive 1.5 years later. Maternal motivations to continue the pregnancy were clearly described for 2 of the 7 cases: religious prohibition of TOP in 1 case, negative experiences of previous abortions in the second case. In another case, the parents hesitated between PC and Norwood surgery. For the other women, the reasons were less clearly expressed. In our series, HLHS is the first indication for PC from prenatal diagnosis (7/16 cases in the same period) while in the literature, heart diseases are the second cause of TOP after the neurological causes. The overrepresentation of this pathology in the families who opt for PC may be due to the unconscious image that both professionals and families have of HLHS: severity of an inevitably fatal disease, rapid postnatal death, and no suffering. Our study may change this view: a child was in fact carrying a curable defect which was discovered 12 days after birth, 2 children died at 5 and 7 months, and 5 of 6 children had major analgesics at the end of life. Nevertheless, the families were supported and followed by the PC network, except 1 who ruptured all contacts in a context of presumed intense suffering, but the other 6 do not regret their choice despite the difficulties.</abstract><cop>France</cop><pmid>22397767</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.arcped.2012.01.022</doi><tpages>7</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Abortion, Eugenic
Adaptation, Psychological
Cooperative Behavior
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome - diagnosis
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome - mortality
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome - psychology
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome - therapy
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Interdisciplinary Communication
Palliative Care - methods
Palliative Care - psychology
Patient Care Team
Pregnancy
Prenatal Diagnosis - methods
Prenatal Diagnosis - psychology
Retrospective Studies
Survival Rate
Terminal Care - methods
title Severe hypoplastic left heart syndrome: palliative care after prenatal diagnosis
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