The 53rd Annual Meeting of Japanese Society of Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery

Presentation information

AEPC-YIA Presentation

AEPC-YIA Presentation (II-YIA)

Sat. Jul 8, 2017 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM ROOM 4 (Exhibition and Event Hall Room 4)

Chair:Satoshi Yasukochi(Heart Center, Nagano Children's Hospital, Japan)
Chair:Gurleen Sharland (President of AEPC)

9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

[II-YIA-03] Long-term outcome following percutaneous closure of isolated secundum atrial septal defects in children: a french nationwide series of 1000 consecutive patients

ZAKARIA JALAL1, LUCIA MAURI2, CLAIRE DAUPHIN3, CELINE GRONIER4, SEBASTIEN HASCOET2, BRUNO LEFORT5, MATHIAS LACHAUD6, JEROME PETIT3, CAROLINE OVAERT7, ALAIN FRAISSE8, XAVIER PILLOIS1, JEAN-BENOIT THAMBO1, ALBAN-ELOUEN BARUTEAU8 (1.UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF BORDEAUX, BORDEAUX, FRANCE, 2.CENTRE CHIRURGICAL MARIELANNELONGUE, LE PLESSIS ROBINSON, FRANCE, 3.UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF CLERMONT FERRAND, CLERMONT FERRAND, FRANCE, 4.UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF STRASBOURG, STRASBOURG, FRANCE, 5.UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF TOURS, TOURS, FRANCE, 6.INSTITUT DU THORAX, NANTES, FRANCE, 7.HÔPITAL LA TIMONE, MARSEILLE, FRANCE, 8.DIVISION OF CARDIOLOGY, DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS, ROYAL BROMPTON HOSPITAL, LONDON, UK)

Introduction: Transcatheter closure has become the preferred treatment strategy in most cases of isolated, secundum atrial septal defect (ASD). Although widely used, data on long-term outcomes in the pediatric population are scarce. We aimed to assess procedural characteristics, early clinical outcome, long-term device-related complications and the electrical remodeling after transcatheter closure of isolated ASD in children.
Methods: A 1998-2014 retrospective multicentre study was performed at 8 French tertiary institutions, including all patients <18 yo who attempted a percutaneous ASD closure with an Amplatzer Septal Occluder.
Results: 1000 children [38% males, median age: 9 yrs (0.7-18.0), median weight: 27 kg (6-92)] were referred for transcatheter ASD closure. They all had a significant left-to-right shunting assessed by right ventricular dilation and/or a 1.5:1 Qp/Qs ratio; Median ASD size was 15 mm in transthoracic echography (TTE).
ASD closure was guided by fluoroscopy and transoesophageal echocardiography in 627 cases (62.7%) or TTE in 373 cases (37.3%). Procedural success rate was 94% with a median occluder size of 19-mm (4 - 40).
Device placement was unsuccessful in 60 patients (6%) due to unfavourable anatomy in 38, early device embolization in 12 and other causes in 10 patients.
Follow-up (FU) data were available for 829 patients. After a mean FU of 53 ± 31 months (range, 5–204), all patients were alive and 96% were asymptomatic. Long-term complications included supraventricular arrhythmias (n=6) and pulmonary hypertension (n=2). No cardiac erosion, late ASO dislodgement or stroke occurred.
Seventy-one women had pregnancy during FU without any associated complication. From an electrical standpoint, supraventricular arrhythmias occurred in 6 patients, no late atrioventricular block was observed and there was no significant difference between preprocedural and last follow-up ECG.
Conclusions: Our large-scale pediatric cohort confirms that transcatheter closure of isolated secundum ASDs is a safe procedure in children, with a favourable long-term outcome and no life-threatening delayed complication.