PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Wright, Lydia K AU - Knight, Jessica H AU - Thomas, Amanda S AU - Oster, Matthew E AU - St Louis, James D AU - Kochilas, Lazaros K TI - Long-term outcomes after intervention for pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum AID - 10.1136/heartjnl-2018-314124 DP - 2019 Jul 01 TA - Heart PG - 1007--1013 VI - 105 IP - 13 4099 - http://heart.bmj.com/content/105/13/1007.short 4100 - http://heart.bmj.com/content/105/13/1007.full SO - Heart2019 Jul 01; 105 AB - Objective Pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum (PA/IVS) can be treated by various operative and catheter-based interventions. We aim to understand the long-term transplant-free survival of patients with PA/IVS by treatment strategy.Methods Cohort study from the Pediatric Cardiac Care Consortium, a multi-institutional registry with prospectively acquired outcome data after linkage with the National Death Index and the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network.Results Eligible patients underwent neonatal surgery or catheter-based intervention for PA/IVS between 1982 and 2003 (median follow-up of 16.7 years, IQR: 12.6–22.7). Over the study period, 616 patients with PA/IVS underwent one of three initial interventions: aortopulmonary shunt, right ventricular decompression or both. Risk factors for death at initial intervention included earlier birth era (1982–1992), chromosomal abnormality and atresia of one or both coronary ostia. Among survivors of neonatal hospitalisation (n=491), there were 99 deaths (4 post-transplant) and 10 transplants (median age of death or transplant 0.7 years, IQR: 0.3–1.8 years). Definite repair or last-stage palliation was achieved in the form of completed two-ventricle repair (n=201), one-and-a-half ventricle (n=39) or Fontan (n=96). Overall 20-year survival was 66%, but for patients discharged alive after definitive repair, it reached 97.6% for single-ventricle patients, 90.9% for those with one-and-a-half ventricle and 98.0% for those with complete two-ventricle repair (log-rank p=0.052).Conclusions Transplant-free survival in PA/IVS is poor due to significant infantile and interstage mortality. Survival into early adulthood is excellent for patients reaching completion of their intended path independent of type of repair.