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Original Article

Perinatal outcomes of congenital heart disease after emergent neonatal cardiac procedures

, , , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 2709-2716 | Received 26 Apr 2017, Accepted 07 Jul 2017, Published online: 25 Jul 2017
 

Abstract

Purpose: We compared outcome of neonates with prenatal and post-natal diagnosis of congenital heart disease presenting in our paediatric heart centre between March 2005 and May 2015 who underwent an emergent intervention within 48 h post-partum.

Materials and methods: In 52/111 (46.8%) with emergent intervention, congenital heart disease was diagnosed prenatally, in 59/111 (53.2%) with no specialized foetal echocardiography, diagnosis was made post-natally. In 98/111 (88.2%), 30-day outcome was known.

Results: Regarding the entire cohort, 30-day survival did not differ significantly in prenatal and post-natal diagnosis group (71.2 vs. 72.9%; p > .1). Infants with prenatal diagnosis were more likely to be born by caesarean section (59.6% vs. 33.9%, p = .01). Those with post-natal diagnosis had a higher need for intubation (32.7% vs. 52.5%; p < .05). Subgroup analysis of HLH/HLHC (hypoplastic left heart/hypoplastic left heart complex) patients revealed higher number of deaths within 30 days of life in the post-natal diagnosis group, although the difference did not reach statistical significance (5/7, 71.4% vs. 5/20, 25.0%; p = .075).

Conclusion: For newborns who require emergent neonatal cardiac procedures, our results point towards a lower death rate after prenatal diagnosis of HLH/HLHC.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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