Can we Screen for Heart Disease with a Risk of Sudden Death in Children at Public Health Centres? The ECIAP (Evaluación Cardiovascular Infantil en Atención Primaria) Study: Cardiovascular Assessment in Children in Primary Care. A multicentre observational study of screening for heart disease with a risk of sudden death.

Author:

Calero Paula Greciano1,Bori Silvia Escriba1,Orvay Juan Antonio Costa2,Pons Nina Gonzalez3,Perez María del Carmen Martin1,Alfonseca Dolores Cardona4,Velazquez Cristina Nogales4,Vallespir Sergi Verd4,Salom Alicia Esther Tur4,Chiandetti Antonella5,Noguera Marcos Navarro5,Blanch Anna Grau6,Genestar Maria Magdalena Rotger6,Menendez Marianna Mambie4,Hidalgo Mercedes Fernandez4,Llinas Juana Maria Segui4,Bon Laura Martorell4,Aguilar Patricia Arestuche4,Conde Beatriz Garrido4,Grao Maria del Valle Sanchez4,Trujillo Katia Sarraff4,Alonso Antoni Muntaner4,Ferragut Catalina Grimalt4,Marco Andrea Soriano4,Rojas Viviana Gomez4,Serra Juan Pol4

Affiliation:

1. Hospital Universitario Son Espases

2. Hospital Can Misses

3. Hospital General Mateu Orfila

4. Gerencia Atención Primaria Mallorca

5. Gerencia del Área de Salud de Ibiza y Formentera

6. Gerencia del Área de Salud de Menorca

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Sudden cardiac death in children is a rare event, but of great social significance. Generally, it is related to heart disease with a risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD), which may occur with cardiovascular symptoms and/or electrocardiographic markers, thus a Primary Care Paediatrician (PCP) could detect them. Therefore, we proposed a study that assesses how to put into practice and conduct a cardiovascular assessment within the routine healthy-child check-ups at six and twelve years of age; that reflects cardiovascular signs and symptoms, as well as the electrocardiographic alterations that children with a risk of SCD in the selected population present; and that assesses the PCP's skill at electrocardiogram (ECG) interpretation. Methods In collaboration with PCPs, primary care nurses, and paediatric cardiologists, an observational, descriptive, multicentre, cross-sectional study was carried out in the Balearic Islands (Spain), from April 2021 to January 2022, inclusive. The PCPs gathered patient data through forms (medical record, electrocardiogram, and physical examination) and sent them to the investigator, together with the informed consent document and electrocardiogram. The investigator passed the electrocardiogram on to the paediatric cardiologists for reading, in an identical form to those the paediatricians had filled in. The variables were collected, and a descriptive analysis performed. Results three paediatric cardiologists, twelve PCPs, and nine nurses from seven public health centres took part. They collected the data from 641 patients, but 233 patients did not participate (in 81.11% due to the PCP's workload). Therefore, the study coverage was around 64%, representing the quotient of the total number of patients who participated, divided by the total number of patients who were eligible for the study. We detected 30 patients with electrocardiographic alterations compatible with SCD risk. Nine of these had been examined by a paediatric cardiologist at some time (functional murmur in 8/9), five had reported shortness of breath with exercise, and four had reported a family history of sudden death. The physical examination of all the patients whose ECG was compatible with a risk of SCD was normal. Upon analysing to what extent the ECG results of the PCP and the paediatric cardiologist agreed: the percentage of agreement in the final interpretation (normal/altered) was 91.9%, while Cohen's kappa coefficient was 31.2% (CI 95%: 13.8% − 48.6%). The sensitivity of the ECG interpretation by the PCP to detect an ECG compatible with a risk of SCD was 29% and the positive predictive value, 45%. Conclusions This study lays the foundations for future SCD risk screening in children, performed by PCPs. However, previously, it would be important to optimise their training in reading and interpreting paediatric ECGs.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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