• Cardiac interdependence in conjoined twins is a rare phenomenon. • Presence of congenital heart disease may be an important prognostic factor. • There is high risk of high-output heart failure and pulmonary hypertension in the donor twin. • If reconstruction is feasible, early separation may improve the chance of survival.
by
Anita Krishnan;
Marni B Jacobs;
Shaine A Morris;
Shabnam Peyvandi;
Aarti H Bhat;
Anjali Chelliah;
Joanne S Chiu;
Bettina F Cuneo;
Grace Freire;
Lisa K Hornberger;
Lisa Howley;
Nazia Husain;
Catherine Ikemba;
Ann Kavanaugh-McHugh;
Shelby Kutty;
Caroline Lee;
Keila N Lopez;
Angela McBrien;
Erik Michelfelder;
Nelangi M Pinto;
Rachel Schwartz;
Kenan WD Stern;
Carolyn Taylor;
Varsha Thakur;
Wayne Tworetzky;
Carol Wittlieb-Weber;
Kris Woldu;
Mary T Donofrio
BACKGROUND: Prenatal detection (PND) has benefits for infants with hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) and transposition of the great arteries (TGA), but associations between sociodemographic and geographic factors with PND have not been sufficiently explored. This study evaluated whether socioeconomic quartile (SEQ), public insurance, race and ethnicity, rural residence, and distance of residence (distance and driving time from a cardiac surgical center) are associated with the PND or timing of PND, with a secondary aim to analyze differences between the United States and Canada. METHODS: In this retrospective cohort study, fetuses and infants <2 months of age with HLHS or TGA admitted between 2012 and 2016 to participating Fetal Heart Society Research Collaborative institutions in the United States and Canada were included. SEQ, rural residence, and distance of residence were derived using maternal census tract from the maternal address at first visit. Subjects were assigned a SEQ z score using the neighborhood summary score or Canadian Chan index and separated into quartiles. Insurance type and self-reported race and ethnicity were obtained from medical charts. We evaluated associations among SEQ, insurance type, race and ethnicity, rural residence, and distance of residence with PND of HLHS and TGA (aggregate and individually) using bivariate analysis with adjusted associations for confounding variables and cluster analysis for centers. RESULTS: Data on 1862 subjects (HLHS: n=1171, 92% PND; TGA: n=691, 58% PND) were submitted by 21 centers (19 in the United States). In the United States, lower SEQ was associated with lower PND in HLHS and TGA, with the strongest association in the lower SEQ of pregnancies with fetal TGA (quartile 1, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.64–0.85], quartile 2, 0.77 [95% CI, 0.64–0.93], quartile 3, 0.83 [95% CI, 0.69–1.00], quartile 4, reference). Hispanic ethnicity (relative risk, 0.85 [95% CI, 0.72–0.99]) and rural residence (relative risk, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.64–0.95]) were also associated with lower PND in TGA. Lower SEQ was associated with later PND overall; in the United States, rural residence and public insurance were also associated with later PND. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that lower SEQ, Hispanic ethnicity, and rural residence are associated with decreased PND for TGA, with lower SEQ also being associated with decreased PND for HLHS. Future work to increase PND should be considered in these specific populations.
by
Lindsay R. Freud;
Doff B. McElhinney;
Brian T. Kalish;
Maria C. Escobar-Diaz;
Rukmini Komarlu;
Michael D. Puchalski;
Edgar T. Jaeggi;
Anita L. Szwast;
Grace Freire;
Stephanie M. Levasseur;
Ann Kavanaugh-McHugh;
Erik Michelfelder;
Anita J. Moon-Grady;
Mary T. Donofrio;
Lisa W. Howley;
Elif Seda Selamet Tierney;
Bettina F. Cuneo;
Shaine A. Morris;
Jay D. Pruetz;
Mary E. van der Velde;
John P. Kovalchin;
Catherine M. Ikemba;
Margaret M. Vernon;
Cyrus Samai;
Gary M. Satou;
Nina L. Gotteiner;
Colin K. Phoon;
Norman H. Silverman;
Wayne Tworetzky
BACKGROUND: In a recent multicenter study of perinatal outcome in fetuses with Ebstein anomaly or tricuspid valve dysplasia, we found that one third of live-born patients died before hospital discharge. We sought to further describe postnatal management strategies and to define risk factors for neonatal mortality and circulatory outcome at discharge. METHODS AND RESULTS: This 23-center, retrospective study from 2005 to 2011 included 243 fetuses with Ebstein anomaly or tricuspid valve dysplasia. Among live-born patients, clinical and echocardiographic factors were evaluated for association with neonatal mortality and palliated versus biventricular circulation at discharge. Of 176 live-born patients, 7 received comfort care, 11 died <24 hours after birth, and 4 had insufficient data. Among 154 remaining patients, 38 (25%) did not survive to discharge. Nearly half (46%) underwent intervention. Mortality differed by procedure; no deaths occurred in patients who underwent right ventricular exclusion. At discharge, 56% of the cohort had a biventricular circulation (13% following intervention) and 19% were palliated. Lower tricuspid regurgitation jet velocity (odds ratio [OR], 2.3 [1.1–5.0], 95% CI, per m/s; P=0.025) and lack of antegrade flow across the pulmonary valve (OR, 4.5 [1.3–14.2]; P=0.015) were associated with neonatal mortality by multivariable logistic regression. These variables, along with smaller pulmonary valve dimension, were also associated with a palliated outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Among neonates with Ebstein anomaly or tricuspid valve dysplasia diagnosed in utero, a variety of management strategies were used across centers, with poor outcomes overall. High-risk patients with low tricuspid regurgitation jet velocity and no antegrade pulmonary blood flow should be considered for right ventricular exclusion to optimize their chance of survival.