Background: There are limited follow-up studies examining surgical and catheter-based reinterventions in long-term survivors of the Fontan operation. Methods and Results: All 773 patients who underwent Fontan at our institution between 1992 and 2009 were retrospectively reviewed. Current information regarding post-Fontan intervention was available for 70%. By 20 years after Fontan, 65% of patients had experienced either surgical or transcatheter intervention. The median time to first reintervention was 9.8 years. Freedom from reoperation was 69% at 15 years and 63% at 20 years. The most common operations were pacemaker placement and Fontan revision. Risk factors for pacemaker placement included systemic left ventricle (hazard ratio [HR], 2.2; P=0.006) and lateral tunnel Fontan (HR, 4.3; P=0.001). Freedom from interventional catheterization was 53% at 15 years and 50% at 20 years. The most common procedures performed were fenestration closure and pulmonary artery intervention. Catheter intervention for anatomic indications was associated with Fontan after 2002 (HR, 2.1; P=0.007), Norwood operation (HR, 2.3; P=0.001), and longer cardiopulmonary bypass time (HR, 1.1 per 10 minutes; P=0.001). Catheter intervention for physiological indications was associated with prolonged post-Fontan pleural drainage (HR, 4.0; P<0.001) and hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HR, 2.0; P=0.01). Conclusions: In this study of Fontan survivors, two thirds of patients required surgical or catheter-based reintervention by 20 years. Families should be counseled that the Fontan is typically not the final stage of single-ventricle palliation.
CITATION STYLE
Downing, T. E., Allen, K. Y., Goldberg, D. J., Rogers, L. S., Ravishankar, C., Rychik, J., … Glatz, A. C. (2017). Surgical and catheter-based reinterventions are common in long-term survivors of the fontan operation. Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.116.004924
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.