Evolution and long term outcome in cases with fetal diagnosis of congenital heart disease: Italian multicentre study
V Fesslova'a, S Navaa, L Villaa, and the Fetal Cardiology Study Group of the Italian Society of Pediatric Cardiology
a Department of
Cardiology, Istituti Clinici di Perfezionamento, via Commenda, 12, Milan, 20121, Italy, b Fetal Cardiology Study Group of the Italian
Society of Pediatric Cardiology: see
appendix
Correspondence to: Dr Fesslova'.
Accepted for publication 2 June 1999
OBJECTIVES
To analyse
the evolution and outcome in utero and after birth of infants with a
fetal diagnosis of congenital heart disease.
DESIGN
Inclusion
criteria were the fetal diagnosis of congenital heart disease,
confirmed postnatally or postmortem, and a complete follow up in utero
and after birth.
SETTING
20 centres
operating prenatal echocardiographic screening.
PATIENTS
847 cases
were included in the study. Gestational age at diagnosis ranged from
15-39 weeks; in 370 cases (43.7%) the diagnosis was made before 24 weeks' gestation.
RESULTS
245/847 cases
(28.9%) were terminated during pregnancy, 227 following early
diagnosis; 128/245 cases (52.2%) had associated anomalies and 117/245
(47.8%) had serious congenital heart disease. Of the remaining 602 cases that continued the pregnancy, 72 (11.9%) died in utero, 259 (43%) died postnatally (83 after surgery or invasive procedures), and
271 infants (45%) survived and presently range in age from 18 months
to 13 years old. The mortality rate was higher in cases with associated
extracardiac or chromosomal anomalies (68% and 74% of cases
continuing pregnancy, respectively), and in cases with heart failure
and complex cardiac defects.
CONCLUSIONS
The data
confirm a relevant fetal and postnatal loss in cases with complex
congenital heart disease, and major clinical use of prenatal diagnosis
in the management of ductus dependent anomalies. Negative prognostic
factors for the outcome were associated anomalies and heart failure.
Keywords: fetal echocardiography; congenital heart disease; prenatal diagnosis
© 1999 by Heart
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