(Circulation. 1999;100:II-145.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Surgery for Congenital Heart Disease |
From the Departments of Cardiac Surgery (K.J.V., D.P.B., R.A.J.), Cardiology (J.W.N.), and Neurology (D.C.B.), Childrens Hospital, Boston, Mass; and Departments of Neurology (D.C.B), Pediatrics (J.W.N.), and Surgery (D.P.B., R.A.J.), Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Correspondence to David C. Bellinger, PhD, Neuroepidemiology Unit, CA-503, Childrens Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115. E-mail bellinger{at}a1.tch.harvard.edu
BackgroundThe assessment of the impact of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) on developmental outcomes in children who undergo open heart surgery is hampered by the absence of a suitable comparison group. The development of interventional catheterization techniques for the repair of certain types of congenital heart lesions provides the opportunity to study children who have not been exposed to CPB.
Methods and ResultsWe performed standardized neuropsychological testing on children after closure of a secundum atrial septal defect through the use of surgery (n=26) or a transcatheter device (n=19). Device patients, compared with surgical patients, were similar in age at defect closure (mean, 6 years) but older at follow-up testing (12.3 versus 10.6 years). The mean weight percentile at closure was greater and the defect size was smaller in the device patients. Families of device patients tended to have a higher parent IQ, higher level of maternal education, and higher level of maternal occupation. In general, however, childrens IQ and achievement scores were in the normal range for both groups. In regression analyses with adjustment for age at testing and parent IQ, surgical repair was associated with a 9.5-point deficit in Full-Scale IQ (P=0.03) and a 9.7-point deficit in Performance IQ (P=0.05). Block Design was the IQ subtest on which treatment groups differed the most (P=0.01). Surgical patients achieved significantly better scores on errors of commission (P=0.05) and attentiveness index (P=0.03) on a continuous performance test of attention. Scores on tests of achievement and other neuropsychological domains did not differ significantly between the groups. Regression analyses within the surgical group failed to identify significant CPB-related risk factors.
ConclusionsA prospective randomized trial or a study that includes prerepair and postrepair assessments is necessary to establish whether the observed advantages of device closure in neuropsychological outcome represent deleterious effects of CPB or a methodological artifact.
Key Words: heart diseases heart defects, congenital cardiopulmonary bypass pediatrics
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