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Long-term surgical outcomes of congenital supravalvular aortic stenosis:a systematic review, meta-analysis and microsimulation study

Authors :
Meccanici, Frederike
Notenboom, Maximiliaan L.
Meijssen, Jade
Smit, Vernon
Van De Woestijne, Pieter C.
Van Den Bosch, Annemien E.
Helbing, Willem A.
Bogers, Ad J.J.C.
Takkenberg, Johanna J.M.
Roos-Hesselink, Jolien W.
Meccanici, Frederike
Notenboom, Maximiliaan L.
Meijssen, Jade
Smit, Vernon
Van De Woestijne, Pieter C.
Van Den Bosch, Annemien E.
Helbing, Willem A.
Bogers, Ad J.J.C.
Takkenberg, Johanna J.M.
Roos-Hesselink, Jolien W.
Source :
Meccanici , F , Notenboom , M L , Meijssen , J , Smit , V , Van De Woestijne , P C , Van Den Bosch , A E , Helbing , W A , Bogers , A J J C , Takkenberg , J J M & Roos-Hesselink , J W 2024 , ' Long-term surgical outcomes of congenital supravalvular aortic stenosis : a systematic review, meta-analysis and microsimulation study ' , European Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery , vol. 65 , no. 1 , ezad360 .
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Congenital supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) is a rare form of congenital outflow tract obstruction and long-term outcomes are scarcely reported. This study aims to provide an overview of outcomes after surgical repair for congenital SVAS. METHODS: A systematic review of published literature was conducted, including observational studies reporting long-term clinical outcome (>2 years) after SVAS repair in children or adults considering >20 patients. Early risks, late event rates and time-to-event data were pooled and entered into a microsimulation model to estimate 30-year outcomes. Life expectancy was compared to the age-, sex- and origin-matched general population. RESULTS: Twenty-three publications were included, encompassing a total of 1472 patients (13 125 patient-years; pooled mean follow-up: 9.0 (6.2) years; median follow-up: 6.3 years). Pooled mean age at surgical repair was 4.7 (5.8) years and the most commonly used surgical technique was the single-patch repair (43.6%). Pooled early mortality was 4.2% (95% confidence interval: 3.2-5.5%) and late mortality was 0.61% (95% CI: 0.45-0.83) per patient-year. Based on microsimulation, over a 30-year time horizon, it was estimated that an average patient with SVAS repair (mean age: 4.7 years) had an observed life expectancy that was 90.7% (95% credible interval: 90.0-91.6%) of expected life expectancy in the matched general population. The microsimulation-based 30-year risk of myocardial infarction was 8.1% (95% credible interval: 7.3-9.9%) and reintervention 31.3% (95% credible interval: 29.6-33.4%), of which 27.2% (95% credible interval: 25.8-29.1) due to repair dysfunction. CONCLUSIONS: After surgical repair for SVAS, 30-year survival is lower than the matched-general-population survival and the lifetime risk of reintervention is considerable. Therefore, lifelong monitoring of the cardiovascular system and in particular residual stenosis and coronary obstruction is recommended.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Meccanici , F , Notenboom , M L , Meijssen , J , Smit , V , Van De Woestijne , P C , Van Den Bosch , A E , Helbing , W A , Bogers , A J J C , Takkenberg , J J M & Roos-Hesselink , J W 2024 , ' Long-term surgical outcomes of congenital supravalvular aortic stenosis : a systematic review, meta-analysis and microsimulation study ' , European Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery , vol. 65 , no. 1 , ezad360 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1422762222
Document Type :
Electronic Resource