1. Temporal Trend in Hospitalization Among Patients With Congenital Heart Disease: A Danish Nationwide Study
- Author
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Chee Woon Lim, Annette Schophuus Jensen, Camilla Margit Marstein, Pernille Steen Bække, Jani Thuraiaiyah, Rebekka Miland Tøndering Lytzen, Christian Jøns, Michael Rahbek Schmidt, Lars Sondergaard, and Troels Højsgaard Jørgensen
- Subjects
all‐cause hospitalization rate ,cardiovascular hospitalization ,congenital heart disease ,length of hospital stay ,noncardiovascular hospitalization ,temporal trend ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background The congenital heart disease (CHD) population is growing and aging. We aim to examine the impact by describing the temporal trend and causes of lifetime hospitalization burden among the CHD population. Methods and Results From the Danish National Patient Registry, 23 141 patients with CHD and their hospitalizations from 1977 to 2018 were identified, excluding patients with extracardiac malformation. Patients with CHD were categorized into major CHD and minor CHD, and each patient was matched with 10 controls by sex and year of birth. The rate of all‐cause hospitalization increased over time from 28.3 to 36.4 hospitalizations per 100 person‐years (PY) with rate difference (RD) per decade of 2.5 (95% CI, 2.0–3.1) hospitalizations per 100 PY for the patients with CHD, compared with the increase from 10.8 to 17.0 per 100 PY (RD per decade, 2.0 [95% CI, 1.8–2.2] per 100 PY) for the control group (RD for CHD versus control, P=0.08). The all‐cause hospitalization rate remained constant for the major CHDs (RD per decade, −0.2 [95% CI, −1.2 to 0.9] per 100 PY) but increased for the minor CHDs (RD per decade, 5.2 [95% CI, 4.3–6.0] per 100 PY). For all patients with CHD, the cardiovascular hospitalization rate remained constant over time (RD per decade, 0.2 [95% CI, −0.3 to 0.6] per 100 PY) whereas the noncardiovascular hospitalization rate increased (RD per decade, 2.1 [95% CI, 1.6–2.7] per 100 PY). The length of all‐cause hospital stays for all patients with CHD decreased from 2.7 (95% CI, 2.6–2.8) days per PY in 1977 to 1987 to 1.6 (95% CI, 1.6–1.7) days per PY in 2008 to 2018. Conclusions Compared with previous decades, patients with CHD have an increasing hospitalization rate, similar to the general population, but a decreasing length of hospital stay. The increase in hospitalization rate was driven by noncardiovascular hospitalizations, with the patients with minor CHD being the key contributor to the increasing rate.
- Published
- 2024
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