Learning to Crawl: Determining the Role of Genetic Abnormalities on Postoperative Outcomes in Congenital Heart Disease

Author:

Landis Benjamin J.12ORCID,Helm Benjamin M.2,Herrmann Jeremy L.3ORCID,Hoover Madeline C.1ORCID,Durbin Matthew D.4,Elmore Lindsey R.5ORCID,Huang Manyan6ORCID,Johansen Michael1,Li Ming6,Przybylowski Leon F.1,Geddes Gabrielle C.2,Ware Stephanie M.25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics, Riley Hospital for Children Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

2. Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

3. Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

4. Division of Neonatal‐Perinatal Medicine, Riley Hospital for Children Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

5. Department of Pediatrics Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

6. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics Indiana University Bloomington School of Public Health Bloomington IN

Abstract

Background Our cardiac center established a systematic approach for inpatient cardiovascular genetics evaluations of infants with congenital heart disease, including routine chromosomal microarray (CMA) testing. This provides a new opportunity to investigate correlation between genetic abnormalities and postoperative course. Methods and Results Infants who underwent congenital heart disease surgery as neonates (aged ≤28 days) from 2015 to 2020 were identified. Cases with trisomy 21 or 18 were excluded. Diagnostic genetic results or CMA with variant of uncertain significance were considered abnormal. We compared postoperative outcomes following initial congenital heart disease surgery in patients found to have genetic abnormality to those who had negative CMA. Among 355 eligible patients, genetics consultations or CMA were completed in 88%. A genetic abnormality was identified in 73 patients (21%), whereas 221 had negative CMA results. Genetic abnormality was associated with prematurity, extracardiac anomaly, and lower weight at surgery. Operative mortality rate was 9.6% in patients with a genetic abnormality versus 4.1% in patients without an identified genetic abnormality ( P =0.080). Mortality was similar when genetic evaluations were diagnostic (9.3%) or identified a variant of uncertain significance on CMA (10.0%). Among 14 patients with 22q11.2 deletion, the 2 mortality cases had additional CMA findings. In patients without extracardiac anomaly, genetic abnormality was independently associated with increased mortality ( P =0.019). CMA abnormality was not associated with postoperative length of hospitalization, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or >7 days to initial extubation. Conclusions Routine genetic evaluations and CMA may help to stratify mortality risk in severe congenital heart disease with syndromic or nonsyndromic presentations.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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