MedPath

Prospective Evaluation of Univentricular Hearts

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Univentricular Heart
Interventions
Other: Univentricular Heart
Registration Number
NCT05620030
Lead Sponsor
University of Erlangen-Nürnberg Medical School
Brief Summary

Univentricular heart defects are among the most complex congenital malformations. The treatment of these patients usually includes 3 operations and accompanying diagnostics, some of which are invasive, within the first 3 to 4 years of life until the "fontan circulation" is established. Unfortunately, the group of patients with a univentricular cardiac malformation is also the group with the highest mortality rate until the Fontan circulation is established. The expected mortality varies depending on the complexity of the underlying intracardiac and extracardiac malformations and possible concomitant morbidity; According to data from the National Quality Assurance in Germany, it is currently up to 30% in patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. However, the treatment methods are well standardized and there has been a clinical protocol in Erlangen since 2008 that includes diagnostic examinations using cardiac catheterization (HKU) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRT), as well as non-invasive, instrument-based diagnostics and targeted blood tests in a consistent sequence before and after the operations regulates. The Erlangen protocol ends with the cardiac MRT six months after the Fontan operation (syn: total cavopulmonary connection \[TCPC\]). If MRT imaging is not possible (e.g. if a cardiac pacemaker is present) or if there is a clinical indication (e.g. an obstruction noticeable on MRT or the presence of an "overflow with right-left shunt"), HKU is performed in the first year after TCPC. These examinations are used to depict hemodynamics, cardiac function, vascular development, and lymphatic drainage disorders in order to evaluate the preoperative risk, adapt treatment strategies to the individual, and identify complications at an early stage. This concept is based on clinical experience and current scientific findings and has proven itself in everyday clinical practice since its introduction for Erlangen-Fontan patients and has proven to be very helpful for individualized treatment. After a successful Fontan operation, the mortality risk in childhood is only low. In the long term, however, some of the patients unfortunately suffer from Fontan-typical long-term complications with protein-loss enteropathy having to be mentioned in particular, which is described in the literature with an incidence of 3-14% and today still a 5-year incidence-has a mortality risk of 6-12%.

Detailed Description

Univentricular heart defects are among the most complex congenital malformations. The treatment of these patients usually includes 3 operations and accompanying diagnostics, some of which are invasive, within the first 3 to 4 years of life until the "fontan circulation" is established. Unfortunately, the group of patients with a univentricular cardiac malformation is also the group with the highest mortality rate until the Fontan circulation is established. The expected mortality varies depending on the complexity of the underlying intracardiac and extracardiac malformations and possible concomitant morbidity; According to data from the National Quality Assurance in Germany, it is currently up to 30% in patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. However, the treatment methods are well standardized and there has been a clinical protocol in Erlangen since 2008 that includes diagnostic examinations using cardiac catheterization (HKU) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRT), as well as non-invasive, instrument-based diagnostics and targeted blood tests in a consistent sequence before and after the operations regulates. The Erlangen protocol ends with the cardiac MRT six months after the Fontan operation (syn: total cavopulmonary connection \[TCPC\]). If MRT imaging is not possible (e.g. if a cardiac pacemaker is present) or if there is a clinical indication (e.g. an obstruction noticeable on MRT or the presence of an "overflow with right-left shunt"), HKU is performed in the first year after TCPC. These examinations are used to depict hemodynamics, cardiac function, vascular development, and lymphatic drainage disorders in order to evaluate the preoperative risk, adapt treatment strategies to the individual, and identify complications at an early stage. This concept is based on clinical experience and current scientific findings and has proven itself in everyday clinical practice since its introduction for Erlangen-Fontan patients and has proven to be very helpful for individualized treatment.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria
  • congenital heart defect of the univentricular type and the clinical necessity of a multi-stage treatment in terms of the Fontan procedure.
Exclusion Criteria
  • no exclusion criteria

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Univentricular HeartUniventricular HeartAll patients with univentricular hearts
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Heart or valvular insufficiency assessed by echocardiography and MRI50 years

Measured through ejaction fraction (EF; \[EF\]=%) and through visual assessment of the valves with e.g. doppler echocardiography.

Additionally, measurement of the same values is performed through MRI

Number of patients with "Failing Fontan"50 years

Examples would be Fontan take-down, heart transplant or passing away

Number of correct findings in patients after Fontan palliation to assess the outcome after TCPC50 years

correct perioperative course after TCPC, correct anatomy after surgery without vascular or anastomotic obstructions, correct cardiovascular function, correct lymphatic vessel presentation, correct liver sonography, blood protein values in the normal range, absence of clinical symptoms

Hypoalbuminemia, hypoproteinemia50 years

measured through blood analysis (in g/L)

Number of patients with Protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) or plastic bronchitis50 years

Assessed by clinical diagnosis

Prevalence and cause of early post-Fontan morbidity50 years

assessed by clinical diagnosis

Pathologic presentation of lymph vessels assessed by MRI50 years

Described through various scores (Biko et al., Schröder et al.)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Universitätsklinikum

🇩🇪

Erlangen, Germany

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