Prediction of postnatal circulation in pulmonary atresia/critical stenosis with intact ventricular septum: systematic review and external validation of models

Author:

Villalaín C.123ORCID,Moon‐Grady A. J.4,Herberg U.5,Strainic J.6,Cohen J. L.7ORCID,Shah A.8,Levi D. S.9,Gómez‐Montes E.123,Herraiz I.123ORCID,Galindo A.123

Affiliation:

1. Fetal Medicine Unit, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospital 12 de Octubre Complutense University Madrid Spain

2. Research Institute Hospital 12 de Octubre (imas12) Madrid Spain

3. Primary Care Interventions to Prevent Maternal and Child Chronic Diseases of Perinatal and Developmental Origin (RICORS network), RD21/0012/0024 Madrid Spain

4. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Cardiology University of California San Francisco, UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital CA USA

5. Klinik für Kinderkardiologie Universitätsklinikum Aachen Germany

6. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Cardiology, The Congenital Heart Collaborative, Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital University Hospitals of Cleveland Medical Center, Case Western University Cleveland OH USA

7. Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York NY USA

8. Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of New York Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York NY USA

9. Division of Cardiology, UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital University of California Los Angeles Medical School Los Angeles CA USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectiveA favorable postnatal prognosis in cases of pulmonary atresia/critical stenosis with intact ventricular septum (PA/CS‐IVS) is generally equated with the possibility of achieving biventricular (BV) repair. Identification of fetuses that will have postnatal univentricular (UV) circulation is key for prenatal counseling, optimization of perinatal care and decision‐making regarding fetal therapy. We aimed to evaluate the accuracy of published models for predicting postnatal circulation in PA/CS‐IVS using a large internationally derived validation cohort.MethodsThis was a systematic review of published uni‐ and multiparametric models for the prediction of postnatal circulation based on echocardiographic findings at between 20 and 28 weeks of gestation. Models were externally validated using data from the International Fetal Cardiac Intervention Registry. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, area under the receiver‐operating‐characteristics curves (AUCs) and proportion of cases with true vs predicted outcome were calculated.ResultsEleven published studies that reported prognostic parameters of postnatal circulation were identified. Models varied widely in terms of the main outcome (UV (n = 3), non‐BV (n = 3), BV (n = 3), right‐ventricle‐dependent coronary circulation (n = 1) or tricuspid valve size at birth (n = 1)) and in terms of the included predictors (single parameters only (n = 6), multiparametric score (n = 4) or both (n = 1)), and were developed on small sample sizes (range, 15–38). Nine models were validated externally given the availability of the required parameters in the validation cohort. Tricuspid valve diameter Z‐score, tricuspid regurgitation, ratios between right and left cardiac structures and the presence of ventriculocoronary connections (VCC) were the most commonly evaluated parameters. Multiparametric models including up to four variables (ratios between right and left structures, right ventricular inflow duration, presence of VCC and tricuspid regurgitation) had the best performance (AUC, 0.80–0.89). Overall, the risk of UV outcome was underestimated and that of BV outcome was overestimated by most models.ConclusionsCurrent prenatal models for the prediction of postnatal outcome in PA/CS‐IVS are heterogeneous. Multiparametric models for predicting UV and non‐BV circulation perform well in identifying BV patients but have low sensitivity, underestimating the rate of fetuses that will ultimately have UV circulation. Until better discrimination can be achieved, fetal interventions may need to be limited to only those cases in which non‐BV postnatal circulation is certain. © 2023 The Authors. Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Reproductive Medicine,General Medicine,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

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