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Children Born With Severe Heart Defects can be Saved by New Approach

by Kathy Jones on Nov 10 2012 4:46 PM

 Children Born With Severe Heart Defects can be Saved by New Approach
A new approach for rebuilding the heart in children born with a severe heart defect called hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) has been outlined by surgeons at Boston Children's Hospital.
This "staged left ventricle recruitment" (SLVR) strategy uses the existing standard single-ventricle treatment for HLHS and additional procedures to spur the body's capacity for healing and growth and encourage the small left ventricle in these children to grow and function.

Members of Boston Children's Departments of Cardiac Surgery and Cardiology-included Sitaram M. Emani, MD; Wayne Tworetzky, MD; James E. Lock, MD; and Pedro J. del Nido, MD.

HLHS is a rare but severe congenital heart defect in which the left ventricle, the chamber of the heart that pumps blood out into the body, does not develop properly. The majority of children born with HLHS undergo a series of three procedures, together known as single ventricle palliation (SVP), culminating in the Fontan procedure.

Surgeons use the sequence to reconstruct a child's heart so that it can function with only a single working ventricle, but only about half of patients treated in this way survive to adulthood.

In 2001, del Nido, Emani and their colleagues started considering ways to help children with HLHS avoid SVP as an end goal and improve long-term outcomes by reconstructing the heart so that it has two working ventricles.

With the SLVR approach, a child undergoes initial single ventricle palliation with the Norwood procedure-a procedure pioneered at Boston Children's in the 1980s-in order to stabilize their circulation. Surgeons then perform additional procedures over time, such as mitral or aortic valve repair, removal of endocardial fibroelastic (EFE) tissue (tough tissue that can restrict the heart's pumping motion) and closure of atrial septal defects (gaps in the wall between the heart's left and right atriums).

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Between each procedure, surgeons allow the child's heart to heal and strengthen, setting the stage for the next operation.

"The goal is to promote blood flow through the patient's left ventricle and thereby stimulate growth of the ventricle. If we can do that, we give the ventricle an opportunity to function," Emani said.

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Emani noted that the SLVR approach is highly customizable based on each individual child's unique heart anatomy. It also requires a high degree of collaboration and an open approach to cardiac care involving multiple medical and surgical subspecialties.

In their report, the authors document their experiences developing and refining the SLVR approach between 2001 and 2010. In that time, 34 children were treated using the approach, 12 of whom were successfully converted to complete, two-ventricle circulation. In the short term, survival rates among SLVR-treated patients have been slightly better than a comparable group of children who underwent SVP.

In addition, patients who underwent SLVR also displayed significant growth in the valves and chambers on the left side of the heart, even if surgeons could not get the left ventricle to function completely, demonstrating that the strategy can effectively rehabilitate the heart and successfully support its growth and function.

Compared to SVP, the SLVR approach has had equal if not better outcomes over the last decade. The approach's overall benefits are geared toward improved long-term outcomes and survival into adulthood.

The team noted that in the short term the SLVR approach is more invasive and intensive than the single ventricle approach. But they expect that the long-term benefits of SLVR-especially in terms of reduced risks of future hospitalization, surgery and heart transplantation-will far outweigh the initial costs.

"We believe the SLVR strategy could revolutionize the pediatric cardiology field's approach to treatment of HLHS," Emani said.

"The general consensus has been that conversion to single ventricle circulation is the safest approach, but it has significant limitations when it comes to adult survival. While we are still refining the process, we think our two-ventricle approach will help children with HLHS not just survive but thrive into adulthood," he added.

The study was reported in the latest issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Source-ANI


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