Objectives To describe neurodevelopmental outcomes in infants with single ventricle (SV) physiology and determine factors associated with worse outcomes. Study design Neurodevelopmental outcomes for ...infants with SV enrolled in a multicenter drug trial were assessed at 14 months of age using the Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II . Multivariable regression analysis was used to identify factors associated with worse outcomes. Results Neurodevelopmental testing was performed at 14 ± 1 months in 170/185 subjects in the trial. Hypoplastic left heart syndrome was present in 59% and 75% had undergone the Norwood operation. Mean Psychomotor Developmental Index (PDI) and mental developmental index (MDI) were 80 ± 18 and 96 ± 14, respectively, (normal 100 ± 15, P < .001 for each). Group-based trajectory analysis provided a 2-group model (“high” and “low”) for height z-score trajectory and brain type natriuretic peptide (BNP) trajectory. The predicted PDI scores were 15 points higher in the “high” height z-score trajectory compared with the “low” cluster ( P < .001). A higher number of serious adverse events during the trial was associated with lower PDI scores ( P = .02). The predicted MDI scores were 13-17 points lower in “low height trajectory-high BNP trajectory” group compared with the other 3 groups ( P < .001). MDI scores were also lower in subjects who required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation during the neonatal hospitalization ( P = .01) or supplemental oxygen at discharge ( P = .01). Conclusions Neurodevelopmental outcome at 14 months of age is impaired in infants with SV physiology. Low height trajectory and high BNP trajectory were associated with worse neurodevelopmental outcomes. Efforts to improve nutritional status alone may not improve neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Objective The study objective was to identify factors associated with death and cardiac transplantation in infants undergoing the Norwood procedure and to determine differences in associations that ...might favor the modified Blalock–Taussig shunt or a right ventricle-to-pulmonary artery shunt. Methods We used competing risks methodology to analyze death without transplantation, cardiac transplantation, and survival without transplantation. Parametric time-to-event modeling and bootstrapping were used to identify independent predictors. Results Data from 549 subjects (follow-up, 2.7 ± 0.9 years) were analyzed. Mortality risk was characterized by early and constant phases; transplant was characterized by only a constant phase. Early phase factors associated with death included lower socioeconomic status ( P = .01), obstructed pulmonary venous return ( P < .001), smaller ascending aorta ( P = .02), and anatomic subtype. Constant phase factors associated with death included genetic syndrome ( P < .001) and lower gestational age ( P < .001). The right ventricle-to-pulmonary artery shunt demonstrated better survival in the 51% of subjects who were full term with aortic atresia ( P < .001). The modified Blalock–Taussig shunt was better among the 4% of subjects who were preterm with a patent aortic valve ( P = .003). Lower pre-Norwood right ventricular fractional area change, pre-Norwood surgery, and anatomy other than hypoplastic left heart syndrome were independently associated with transplantation (all P < .03), but shunt type was not ( P = .43). Conclusions Independent risk factors for intermediate-term mortality include lower socioeconomic status, anatomy, genetic syndrome, and lower gestational age. Term infants with aortic atresia benefited from a right ventricle-to-pulmonary artery shunt, and preterm infants with a patent aortic valve benefited from a modified Blalock–Taussig shunt. Right ventricular function and anatomy, but not shunt type, were associated with transplantation.
Objective To assess the variability in asymmetric growth and its association with neurodevelopment in infants with single ventricle (SV). Study design We analyzed weight-for-age z -score minus head ...circumference-for-age z -score (HCAZ), relative head growth (cm/kg), along with individual growth variables in subjects prospectively enrolled in the Infant Single Ventricle Trial. Associations between growth indices and scores on the Psychomotor Developmental Index (PDI) and Mental Developmental Index (MDI) of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II (BSID-II) at 14 months were assessed. Results Of the 230 subjects enrolled in the Infant Single Ventricle trial, complete growth data and BSID-II scores were available in 168 (73%). Across the cohort, indices of asymmetric growth varied widely at enrollment and before superior cavopulmonary connection (SCPC) surgery. BSID-II scores were not associated with these asymmetry indices. In bivariate analyses, greater pre-SCPC HCAZ correlated with higher MDI ( r = 0.21; P = .006) and PDI ( r = 0.38; P < .001) and a greater HCAZ increase from enrollment to pre-SCPC with higher PDI ( r = 0.15; P = .049). In multivariable modeling, pre-SCPC HCAZ was an independent predictor of PDI ( P = .03), but not MDI. Conclusion In infants with SV, growth asymmetry was not associated with neurodevelopment at 14 months, but pre-SCPC HCAZ was associated with PDI. Asymmetric growth, important in other high-risk infants, is not a brain-sparing adaptation in infants with SV. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov : NCT00113087.
Objectives To describe growth patterns in infants with single ventricle physiology and determine factors influencing growth. Study design Data from 230 subjects enrolled in the Pediatric Heart ...Network Infant Single Ventricle Enalapril Trial were used to assess factors influencing change in weight-for-age z-score (∆z) from study enrollment (0.7 ± 0.4 months) to pre-superior cavopulmonary connection (SCPC; 5.1 ± 1.8 months, period 1) and pre-SCPC to final study visit (14.1 ± 0.9 months, period 2). Predictor variables included patient characteristics, feeding regimen, clinical center, and medical factors during neonatal (period 1) and SCPC hospitalizations (period 2). Univariate regression analysis was performed, followed by backward stepwise regression and bootstrapping reliability to inform a final multivariable model. Results Weights were available for 197 of 230 subjects for period 1 and 173 of 197 subjects for period 2. For period 1, greater gestational age, younger age at study enrollment, tube feeding at neonatal hospitalization discharge, and clinical center were associated with a greater negative ∆z (poorer growth) in multivariable modeling (adjusted R2 = 0.39, P < .001). For period 2, younger age at SCPC and greater daily caloric intake were associated with greater positive ∆z (better growth; R2 = 0.10, P = .002). Conclusions Aggressive nutritional support and earlier SCPC are modifiable factors associated with a favorable change in weight-for-age z-score.
At 6 years of age, patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome had mean age-adjusted z -scores for weight and height below the normative population, and body mass index was similar to the normative ...population. Males had the greatest increase in z -scores for body mass index. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00115934.
Objectives To assess self-reported quality of life (QOL) in a large multicenter cohort of adolescent and young adults surviving Fontan. Study design Cross-sectional. The Pediatric Quality of Life ...Inventory (PedsQL) was administered to 408 survivors of Fontan ages 13-25 years enrolled in the Pediatric Heart Network Fontan Follow-up Study. Subjects also completed either the Child Health Questionnaire (age <19 years) or Short Form Health Survey (age ≥19 years). PedsQL data were compared with matched controls without a chronic health condition. Correlations between the measures were examined. Results Mean PedsQL scores for subjects receiving Fontan were significantly lower than those for the control group for physical and psychosocial QOL ( P < .001). Overall, 45% of subjects receiving Fontan had scores in the clinically significant impaired range for physical QOL with 30% in the impaired range for psychosocial QOL. For each 1 year increase in age, the physical functioning score decreased by an average of 0.76 points ( P = .004) and the emotional functioning score decreased by an average of 0.64 points ( P = .03). Among subjects ≥19 years of age, the physical functioning score decreased by an average of 2 points for each year increase in age ( P = .02). PedsQL scale scores were significantly correlated with conceptually related Child Health Questionnaire ( P < .001) and Short Form Health Survey scores ( P < .001). Conclusions Survivors of Fontan are at risk for significantly impaired QOL which may decline with advancing age. Routine assessment of QOL is essential to inform interventions to improve health outcomes. The PedsQL allowed QOL assessment from pediatrics to young adulthood. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov : NCT00132782.
Newborns with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and other single right ventricular variants require substantial health care resources. Weekend acute care has been associated with worse outcomes and ...increased resource use in other populations but has not been studied in patients with single ventricle. Subjects of the Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial were classified by whether they had a weekend admission and by day of the week of Norwood procedure. The primary outcome was hospital length of stay (LOS); secondary outcomes included transplant-free survival, intensive care unit (ICU) LOS, and days of mechanical ventilation. The Student's t test with log transformation and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test were used to analyze associations. Admission day was categorized for 533 of 549 subjects (13% weekend). The day of the Norwood was Thursday/Friday in 39%. There was no difference in median hospital LOS, transplant-free survival, ICU LOS, or days ventilated for weekend versus non-weekend admissions. Day of the Norwood procedure was not associated with a difference in hospital LOS, transplant-free survival, ICU LOS, or days ventilated. Prenatally diagnosed infants born on the weekend had lower mean birth weight, younger gestational age, and were more likely to be intubated but did not have a difference in measured outcomes. In conclusion, in this cohort of patients with single right ventricle, neither weekend admission nor end-of-the-week Norwood procedure was associated with increased use of hospital resources or poorer outcomes. We speculate that the complex postoperative course following the Norwood procedure outweighs any impact that day of admission or operation may have on these outcomes.
Background Mitral regurgitation is the most common indication for reoperation in children following repair of atrioventricular septal defect (AVSD). We hypothesized that angiotensin-converting enzyme ...inhibitor therapy would decrease the severity of mitral regurgitation and limit left ventricular volume overload in children following AVSD repair. Methods The Pediatric Heart Network designed a placebo-controlled randomized trial of enalapril in this population. The primary aim was to test the effect of enalapril on the change in left ventricular end-diastolic dimension body surface area–adjusted z score. Before the launch of the trial, a feasibility study was performed to estimate the number of patients with at least moderate mitral regurgitation following AVSD repair. Trial experience Seventeen months after the start of the study, 349 patients were screened, 8 were trial eligible, and only 5 were enrolled. The study was subsequently terminated because of low patient accrual. Several factors led to the problems with patient accrual, including (1) the use of criteria to assess disease severity in the feasibility study that were not identical to those used in the trial, (2) failure to achieve equipoise for the study among clinicians and referring physicians, (3) reliance on methodology developed in adult populations with different disease mechanisms, and (4) absence of adequate data to define the natural history of the disease process under study. Progress in the treatment of children with cardiovascular disease will depend on the future of multicenter collaborative clinical trials. The lessons learned from this study may contribute to improvements in this research.
In recent years, however, the NHLBI has strongly embraced an expansion of pediatric research in all areas related to its mandate, including sickle-cell anemia and other inherited blood disorders, ...asthma, neonatal respiratory distress syndrome, sleep disorders, and congenital and acquired heart disease. The term pediatric covers a broad developmental spectrum, with implications ranging from differential drug metabolism at various ages to concerns about the impact of clinical study interventions on growth. ...pediatric studies need to include children in various phases of development, often following them for extended periods of time, which adds substantially to the costs and time commitment on the part of subjects and research teams (2).
Objective The purpose of this analysis was to evaluate a novel strategy for reporting adverse events in the Pediatric Heart Network’s randomized surgical trial of systemic–pulmonary artery shunt ...versus right ventricle–pulmonary artery conduit in infants with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. The strategy was developed to align the reporting process with the needs of a surgical trial while maintaining participant safety. Methods Adverse event reporting was analyzed for 2 groups of study subjects: those randomized to a trial arm during a period in which a standard adverse event reporting system was used (period 1) and those randomized after institution of a system that focused serious adverse event reporting on 6 sentinel events (period 2). The analysis encompassed the period from randomization (Norwood surgery) to hospital discharge from stage II surgery. Adverse event rates were compared using a Poisson regression model for the number of events per subject. Results From period 1 to period 2, the rate of serious adverse events requiring expedited reporting decreased as expected (0.42 vs 0.14/subject/month of follow-up; P < .001). Subjects with a serious (sentinel) adverse event in period 2 had a significantly higher rate of death and cardiac transplantation. Conclusions The new adverse event reporting system successfully targeted subjects at highest risk, while decreasing the administrative burden associated with adverse event reports. This methodology may be of benefit in trials evaluating surgical or device-based interventions and in critically ill populations where many common clinical events would qualify as serious adverse events in the context of a drug trial.