Background: The development of microvascular plugs (MVPs) has enabled novel transcatheter deliverable endoluminal pulmonary flow restrictors (PFRs) with the potential to treat newborns and infants with life-threatening congenital heart diseases (CHDs) in a minimally invasive manner. We present our experience to evaluate the efficacy of this concept in controlling pulmonary blood flow in various CHDs.

Methods: Retrospective clinical data review of patients with CHD and pulmonary over-circulation who received bilateral PFRs percutaneously.

Results: Twenty-eight PFRs (7 MVP-5Q, 12 MVP-7Q, and 9 MVP-9Q) were finally implanted in 14 patients with a median age of 1.6 months (IQR, 0.9-2.3) and a median weight of 3.1 Kg (IQR, 2.7-3.6). Nine patients had large intra-cardiac left-to-right shunts (including 3 with fatal trisomy and palliative programs), 2 had borderline left ventricles, 2 had Taussig-Bing anomaly, and one had a hypoplastic left heart. Four patients had concomitant ductal stenting. Two MVP-5Qs were snare-removed and upsized to MVP-7Q. Patients experienced a significant drop in oxygen saturation and Qp/Qs. All patients were discharged from the ICU after a median of 3.5 days (IQR, 2-5.8) postoperative. Five patients had routine inter-stage catheterization and no device embolization or pulmonary branch distortion was seen. Fourteen (50%) PFRs were surgically explanted uneventfully on a median of 4.3 months (IQR, 1.2-6) post-implantation during biventricular repair in 6 patients and stage-2 palliation in one patient. The latter died 1 month post-operative from severe sepsis. Four patients are scheduled for surgical PFR removal and biventricular repair. Two patients with trisomy 18 died at 1 and 6.8 months post-procedure from non-cardiac causes. One patient with trisomy 13 is alive at 2.7 months post-procedure.

Conclusion: It is feasible to bespoke MVPs and implant them as effective PFRs in various CHDs. This approach enables staged left ventricular recruitment, comprehensive stage-2 or biventricular repair with lower risk by postponing surgeries to later infancy. Device explantation is uneventful, and the outcomes afterward are promising.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10363685PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2023.1150579DOI Listing

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