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Outcomes of heart transplantation in children with heterotaxy syndrome

End-stage congenital heart disease in children with heterotaxy syndrome might necessitate heart transplantation. Heart transplantation in heterotaxy patients can be associated with several technical (e.g. redo, systemic/pulmonary-venous/situs anomalies, pulmonary artery reconstruction), and extra-ca...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European journal of cardio-thoracic surgery 2024-05
Main Authors: Alsoufi, Bahaaldin, Kozik, Deborah, Lambert, Andrea Nicole, Deshpande, Shriprasad, Sparks, Joshua D, Trivedi, Jaimin
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:End-stage congenital heart disease in children with heterotaxy syndrome might necessitate heart transplantation. Heart transplantation in heterotaxy patients can be associated with several technical (e.g. redo, systemic/pulmonary-venous/situs anomalies, pulmonary artery reconstruction), and extra-cardiac (e.g. ciliary dyskinesia, infections, gastrointestinal) challenges. We aim to examine if heterotaxy syndrome is associated with increased early or late transplantation risks. The United Network for Organ Sharing transplantation database was merged with the Paediatric Health Information System administrative database to identify children with heterotaxy who received heart transplantation. Characteristics and outcomes were compared between children with heterotaxy and contemporaneous non-heterotaxy congenital and non-congenital cardiomyopathy control groups. After merger, our cohort of 1122 patients was divided to three groups: group heterotaxy (n = 143), group non-heterotaxy congenital (n = 428) and group cardiomyopathy (n = 551). There were differences in the characteristics between the 3 groups, with heterotaxy being comparable to non-heterotaxy congenital group. The waitlist duration was longer for heterotaxy than non-heterotaxy congenital and cardiomyopathy groups (91 vs 63 vs 56 days, p 
ISSN:1873-734X
DOI:10.1093/ejcts/ezae204