Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2001; 49(1): 21-26
DOI: 10.1055/s-2001-9911
Original Cardiovascular
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Grown-Up Congenital Heart Disease-Medical Demands Look Back, Look Forward 2000[*]

J. Somerville
  • GUCH Unit, Middlesex Hospital, London, UK
  • Jane Somerville GUCH Unit, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
31 December 2001 (online)

A new medical community, the grown-up congenital heart patients - GUCH - has resulted from successes of cardiac surgery over 30 - 40 years. Many survivors have complicated problems, medical and surgical, demanding experience and expertise neither provided nor organised in most countries. Islands of good care exist with difficulty. The experience of one specialist GUCH unit established for 25 years shows that 55 - 60 % admissions are for complex lesions, particularly after complicated surgery. The patients' overall costs are at least twice those of other cardiac patients. GUCH admissions are about 5 - 8 % of the total, varying according to the population/region served. Supervised medical care for GUCH is equally important in outpatient services, involving 3 times the secretarial time of other cardiac patients, an accessible database and a “helpline” for doctors and patients. This may be life-saving in patients with complex conditions. The GUCH population is ageing, with increasing numbers of complex patients. 30 % of admissions now are over 40 years old, and 5 % are over 60, confirming that this is an adult medical speciality, not paediatric. Invasive investigations and arrhythmias provide the most frequent reasons for admissions - atrial flutter is the commonest arrhythmia, needing experts when it occurs in Fontan, transposition, etc. Routine coronary arteriography is also important. In cardiac surgery, one in five admissions presents organisational problems. Reoperation, now as many as 9 or 10 times, has to be optimised. Reoperation on left and right outflow tracts - for changing valves and conduits - is more common than first operations. GUCH patients represent a relatively small portion of the whole population. Such patients in a population of 7 - 8 million need to be concentrated in 1 - 2 centres, depending on culture, religion, geography, language etc., to provide necessary experience, expertise and education.

1 Presented at WATCH-Symposium of the Swiss Society of Cardiology within the 3rd joint meeting of the Austrian, German and Swiss Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery; Lucerne, Switzerland, February 9 - 12, 2000.

References

  • 1 Somerville J. The Grown Up Congenital Hearts: Good care is the profession's responsibility.  British Journal of Cardiology. 1998;  5 55-62
  • 2 “Grown-up”: Introduced 1633 “Having reached the age of maturity”. Shorter Oxford English Dictionary 1955
  • 3 Thorne S, Barnes I, Cullinan P, Somerville J. Amiodarone-associated Thyroid dysfunction. Risk factors in adults with congenital heart disease.  Circulation. 1999;  100 149-154
  • 4 Sarubbi B, Stone S, Somerville J. “Sudden death” in the grown-up congenital heart (GUCH) population. Characteristics and pre-mortal management of 94 consecutive patients. In press
  • 5 Li W, Somerville J. Infective endocarditis in the grown-up congenital heart (GUCH) population.  European Heart Journal. 1998;  19 166-173
  • 6 Dore A, Glancy L, Stone S, Menashe V D, Somerville J. Cardiac surgery for grown-up congenital heart patients: Survey of 307 consecutive operations 1991 - 1994.  American Journal of Cardiology. 1997;  8 906-913
  • 7 Somerville J. Near misses and disasters in the treatment of grown-up congenital heart patients.  Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 1997;  9 124-127
  • 8 Presbitero P, Rabajoli F, Somerville J. Pregnancy in patients with congenital heart disease. Schweizer Med.  Wochenschrift. 1995;  125 311-315

1 Presented at WATCH-Symposium of the Swiss Society of Cardiology within the 3rd joint meeting of the Austrian, German and Swiss Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery; Lucerne, Switzerland, February 9 - 12, 2000.

Prof. Dr. J. Somerville

81 Harley Street

London W1N 1DE

Great Britain

Phone: (+ 44) (0) 207 299-9407

Fax: (+ 44) (0) 207 299-9409

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