Background: The interstage period after discharge from stage 1 palliation carries high morbidity and mortality. The impact of social determinants of health on interstage outcomes is not well characterized. We assessed the relationship between childhood opportunity and acute interstage outcomes.
Methods: Infants discharged home after stage 1 palliation in the National Pediatric Quality Improvement Collaborative Phase II registry (2016-2022) were retrospectively reviewed. Zip code-level Childhood Opportunity Index (COI), a composite metric of 29 indicators across education, health and environment, and socioeconomic domains, was used to classify patients into 5 COI levels. Acute interstage outcomes included death or transplant listing, unplanned readmission, intensive care unit admission, unplanned catheterization, and reoperation. The association between COI level and acute interstage outcomes was assessed using logistic regression with sequential adjustment for potential confounders.
Results: The analysis cohort included 1837 patients from 69 centers. Birth weight (<0.001) and proximity to a surgical center at birth (=0.02) increased with COI level. Stage 1 length of stay decreased (=0.001), and exclusive oral feeding rate at discharge increased (<0.001), with higher COI level. More than 98% of patients in all COI levels were enrolled in home monitoring. Death or transplant listing occurred in 101 (5%) patients with unplanned readmission in 987 (53%), intensive care unit admission in 448 (24%), catheterization in 345 (19%), and reoperation in 83 (5%). There was no difference in the incidence or time to occurrence of any acute interstage outcome among COI levels in unadjusted or adjusted analysis. There was no interaction between race and ethnicity and childhood opportunity in acute interstage outcomes.
Conclusions: Zip code COI level is associated with differences in preoperative risk factors and stage 1 palliation hospitalization characteristics. Acute interstage outcomes, although common across the spectrum of childhood opportunity, are not associated with COI level in an era of highly prevalent home monitoring programs. The role of home monitoring in mitigating disparities during the interstage period merits further investigation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.124.069127 | DOI Listing |
Physiol Rep
November 2024
Department of Pediatrics, Section of Cardiology, Children's Hospital Colorado and University of Colorado Anschutz, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Preliminary evidence suggests perturbations of the kynurenine pathway (KP) of tryptophan metabolism in infants with single ventricle heart disease (SVHD). In 72 infants with SVHD undergoing stage 2 palliation (S2P) and 41 controls, we quantified serum KP metabolite concentrations via tandem mass spectroscopy pre-S2P and post-S2P at 2, 24, and 48 h and assessed metabolite relationships with post-S2P outcomes (length of stay, hypoxemia burden, and intubation duration). Pre-S2P, SVHD infants had lower tryptophan and serotonin levels and higher kynurenic acid, 3-hydroxykynurenine, and picolinic acid levels than controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculation
July 2024
Department of Cardiology, Boston Children's Hospital and Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, MA (B.Z., M.L., L.A.S., D.W.B.).
Background: The interstage period after discharge from stage 1 palliation carries high morbidity and mortality. The impact of social determinants of health on interstage outcomes is not well characterized. We assessed the relationship between childhood opportunity and acute interstage outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
November 2024
Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Niigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, 1-757 Asahimachi-Dori, Chuo-Ku, Niigata, Japan.
Front Pediatr
December 2023
Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, United States.
Introduction: Children with single ventricle heart disease (SVHD) experience significant morbidity across systems and time, with 70% of patients experiencing acute kidney injury, 33% neurodevelopmental impairment, 14% growth failure, and 5.5% of patients suffering necrotizing enterocolitis. Proteomics is a method to identify new biomarkers and mechanisms of injury in complex physiologic states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Diagn Ther
October 2022
Department of Cardiac Surgery, Glenfield Hospital, Leicester, UK.
The treatment of complex multi-segment disease concomitantly affecting the aortic arch and descending thoracic aorta is technically challenging. Until the 1990s, such extensive pathology was addressed by median sternotomy for aortic arch replacement followed by a traumatic thoraco-abdominal incision for reconstruction of the descending aorta as a single- or two-stage procedure. The advent of the conventional elephant trunk procedure by Borst in 1983 simplified the second-stage of this procedure by eliminating the need for clamping of the descending thoracic aorta.
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