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Risk stratification models for congenital heart surgery in children: Comparative single-center study

  • Sara Bobillo-Perez
  • , Joan Sanchez-de-Toledo
  • , Susana Segura
  • , Monica Girona-Alarcon
  • , Maria Mele
  • , Anna Sole-Ribalta
  • , Debora Cañizo Vazquez
  • , Iolanda Jordan*
  • , Francisco Jose Cambra
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Indexed journal article Articlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective: Three scores have been proposed to stratify the risk of mortality for each cardiac surgical procedure: The RACHS-1, the Aristotle Basic Complexity (ABC), and the STS-EACTS complexity scoring model. The aim was to compare the ability to predict mortality and morbidity of the three scores applied to a specific population. Design: Retrospective, descriptive study. Setting: Pediatric and neonatal intensive care units in a referral hospital. Patients: Children under 18 years admitted to the intensive care unit after surgery. Interventions: None. Outcome measures: Demographic, clinical, and surgical data were assessed. Morbidity was considered as prolonged length of stay (LOS > 75 percentile), high respiratory (>72 hours of mechanical ventilation), and high hemodynamic support (inotropic support >20). Results: One thousand and thirty-seven patients were included, in which 205 were newborns (18%). The category 2 was the most frequent in the three scores: In RACHS-1, ABC, 44.9%, and STS-EACTS, 40.8%. Newborns presented significant higher categories. Children required cardiopulmonary bypass in more occasions (P <.001) but the times of bypass and aortic cross-clamp were significantly higher in newborns (P <.001 and P =.016). Thirty-two patients died (2.8%). A quarter of patients had a prolonged LOS, 17%, a high respiratory support, and 7.1%, a high hemodynamic support. RACHS-1 (AUC 0.760) and STS-EACTS (AUC 0.763) were more powerful for predicting mortality and STS-EACTS for predicting prolonged LOS (AUC 0.733) and the need for high respiratory support (AUC 0.742). Conclusions: STS-EACTS seems to stratify better risk of mortality, prolonged LOS, and need for respiratory support after surgery.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1066-1077
Number of pages12
JournalCongenital Heart Disease
Volume14
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • cardiac surgery
  • congenital heart disease
  • hospital mortality
  • intensive care
  • morbidity
  • risk adjustment

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