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In previous studies on patients under 6 months of age undergoing a wide range of congenital cardiac operations, Dr. Meena Nathan and her colleagues at Boston Children’s Hospital found that immediate revisions of procedures intraoperatively that resulted in adequate anatomic correction of residual defects did not affect outcomes, but that delayed revisions of residual lesions resulted in worse patient outcomes.
Dr. Nathan presented the results of a larger prospective cohort of patients that she and her colleagues studied who were followed from index surgery to discharge from January 2011 to September 2013.
Patients were divided into four groups: a) intraoperative revisions of residual lesion, b) delayed postoperative revision of residual lesions during the same hospital stay, c) both intraoperative and delayed (BOTH) revision of residual lesions, d) and no revisions (neither intraoperative nor postoperative revision), Dr. Nathan said at the annual meeting of the American Association for Thoracic Surgery.
They used linear and logistic regression to compare the outcomes mortality, complications (excluding unplanned postoperative reinterventions) and postoperative hospital length of stay across the four groups (using patients who had intraoperative revisions only as reference group).
"We adjusted for baseline patient risk including age, prematurity, presence of extracardiac anomalies, and RACHS-1 risk category, each of which could contribute to the difference in outcomes," according to Dr. Nathan.
"In addition, to allow inclusion of all patients in the risk-adjusted analyses, we added two additional categories to the RACHS-1 categories: all patients less than 18 years of age with non–RACHS-1 categorizable procedures, and adults greater than 18 years who are not eligible for RACHS-1 risk adjustment," Dr. Nathan added.
A total of 2,427 patients were discharged after congenital cardiac operations during the time period studied.
As might be expected, on multivariable modeling, adjusting for other significant patient factors, the no-revisions group fared better than the other three groups. The intraoperative revision group had significantly lower postoperative length of stay and complication rates when compared to the delayed postoperative revision and the BOTH group, but they showed no significant differences in mortality compared to these two groups.
On subgroup analysis of the intraoperative revision group, 86% left the hospital with an optimal or adequate repair on discharge echocardiogram, Dr. Nathan added.
"We found that the intraoperative correction of residual lesions results in a shorter length of stay and lower complications when compared to those patients who underwent delayed postoperative revision of residual lesion," she concluded.
Dr. Nathan reported that she had no relevant disclosures.
In previous studies on patients under 6 months of age undergoing a wide range of congenital cardiac operations, Dr. Meena Nathan and her colleagues at Boston Children’s Hospital found that immediate revisions of procedures intraoperatively that resulted in adequate anatomic correction of residual defects did not affect outcomes, but that delayed revisions of residual lesions resulted in worse patient outcomes.
Dr. Nathan presented the results of a larger prospective cohort of patients that she and her colleagues studied who were followed from index surgery to discharge from January 2011 to September 2013.
Patients were divided into four groups: a) intraoperative revisions of residual lesion, b) delayed postoperative revision of residual lesions during the same hospital stay, c) both intraoperative and delayed (BOTH) revision of residual lesions, d) and no revisions (neither intraoperative nor postoperative revision), Dr. Nathan said at the annual meeting of the American Association for Thoracic Surgery.
They used linear and logistic regression to compare the outcomes mortality, complications (excluding unplanned postoperative reinterventions) and postoperative hospital length of stay across the four groups (using patients who had intraoperative revisions only as reference group).
"We adjusted for baseline patient risk including age, prematurity, presence of extracardiac anomalies, and RACHS-1 risk category, each of which could contribute to the difference in outcomes," according to Dr. Nathan.
"In addition, to allow inclusion of all patients in the risk-adjusted analyses, we added two additional categories to the RACHS-1 categories: all patients less than 18 years of age with non–RACHS-1 categorizable procedures, and adults greater than 18 years who are not eligible for RACHS-1 risk adjustment," Dr. Nathan added.
A total of 2,427 patients were discharged after congenital cardiac operations during the time period studied.
As might be expected, on multivariable modeling, adjusting for other significant patient factors, the no-revisions group fared better than the other three groups. The intraoperative revision group had significantly lower postoperative length of stay and complication rates when compared to the delayed postoperative revision and the BOTH group, but they showed no significant differences in mortality compared to these two groups.
On subgroup analysis of the intraoperative revision group, 86% left the hospital with an optimal or adequate repair on discharge echocardiogram, Dr. Nathan added.
"We found that the intraoperative correction of residual lesions results in a shorter length of stay and lower complications when compared to those patients who underwent delayed postoperative revision of residual lesion," she concluded.
Dr. Nathan reported that she had no relevant disclosures.
In previous studies on patients under 6 months of age undergoing a wide range of congenital cardiac operations, Dr. Meena Nathan and her colleagues at Boston Children’s Hospital found that immediate revisions of procedures intraoperatively that resulted in adequate anatomic correction of residual defects did not affect outcomes, but that delayed revisions of residual lesions resulted in worse patient outcomes.
Dr. Nathan presented the results of a larger prospective cohort of patients that she and her colleagues studied who were followed from index surgery to discharge from January 2011 to September 2013.
Patients were divided into four groups: a) intraoperative revisions of residual lesion, b) delayed postoperative revision of residual lesions during the same hospital stay, c) both intraoperative and delayed (BOTH) revision of residual lesions, d) and no revisions (neither intraoperative nor postoperative revision), Dr. Nathan said at the annual meeting of the American Association for Thoracic Surgery.
They used linear and logistic regression to compare the outcomes mortality, complications (excluding unplanned postoperative reinterventions) and postoperative hospital length of stay across the four groups (using patients who had intraoperative revisions only as reference group).
"We adjusted for baseline patient risk including age, prematurity, presence of extracardiac anomalies, and RACHS-1 risk category, each of which could contribute to the difference in outcomes," according to Dr. Nathan.
"In addition, to allow inclusion of all patients in the risk-adjusted analyses, we added two additional categories to the RACHS-1 categories: all patients less than 18 years of age with non–RACHS-1 categorizable procedures, and adults greater than 18 years who are not eligible for RACHS-1 risk adjustment," Dr. Nathan added.
A total of 2,427 patients were discharged after congenital cardiac operations during the time period studied.
As might be expected, on multivariable modeling, adjusting for other significant patient factors, the no-revisions group fared better than the other three groups. The intraoperative revision group had significantly lower postoperative length of stay and complication rates when compared to the delayed postoperative revision and the BOTH group, but they showed no significant differences in mortality compared to these two groups.
On subgroup analysis of the intraoperative revision group, 86% left the hospital with an optimal or adequate repair on discharge echocardiogram, Dr. Nathan added.
"We found that the intraoperative correction of residual lesions results in a shorter length of stay and lower complications when compared to those patients who underwent delayed postoperative revision of residual lesion," she concluded.
Dr. Nathan reported that she had no relevant disclosures.