作者
Éric Rosenthal,Shakeel A. Qureshi,Kothandam Sivakumar,Matthew Jones,S. Yong,Saleha Kabir,Pramod Sagar,Puthiyedath Thejaswi,Sébastien Hascoët,Clément Batteux,Younes Boudjemline,Ziyad M. Hijazi,Jamil Aboulhosn,Daniel S. Levi,Morris Salem,Edwin Francis,Aleksander Kempny,Alain Fraisse,Carles Bautista‐Rodriguez,Kevin Walsh,Damien Kenny,Brian Traynor,Salim N. Al Maskari,James R. Bentham,László Környei,Muthukumaran C. Sivaprakasam,Ata Firouzi,Zahra Khajali,Lee Benson,Mark Osten,Alban‐Elouen Baruteau,Matthew A. Crystal,Thomas J. Forbes,Stanimir Georgiev,Horst Sievert,Do Nguyen Tin,Daniel Springmüller,Anand Subramanian,Hussein Abdul-Wahab M. Abdullah,Radwa Bedair,Francisco Chamié,Ahmet Çelebi,Jesús Damsky Barbosa,Pieter De Meester,Luca Giugno,Zakaria Jalal,Clément Karsenty,Anastasia Schleiger,Gregory A. Fleming,André Jakob,Tevfik Karagöz,Gur Mainzer,Gareth J. Morgan,Nazmi Narın,Shabana Shahanavaz,Zachary L. Steinberg,Osamah Aldoss,Elnur Hajiyev,Oliver Aregullin,Hélène Bouvaist,Thilo Fleck,François Godart,Sophie Malekzadeh‐Milani,Paulo Antônio Marra da Motta,Ángel Sánchez‐Recalde,Juan Pablo Sandoval,Weiyi Tan,John Thomson,Pablo Teixeirense,Evan M. Zahn
摘要
BACKGROUND: Covered stent correction for a sinus venosus atrial septal defect (SVASD) was first performed in 2009. This innovative approach was initially viewed as experimental and was reserved for highly selected patients with unusual anatomic variants. In 2016, increasing numbers of procedures began to be performed, and in several centers, it is now offered as a standard of care option alongside surgical repair. However, covered stent correction for SVASD is not recognized by regulatory authorities, and in the minds of many pediatric and adult congenital cardiologists and surgeons, the condition is viewed as treatable only by cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. METHODS: In April 2023, all centers identified from international conferences, publications, and colleague networks to be undertaking covered stent correction for SVASD were invited to participate in a retrospective audit of their procedures. RESULTS: Data were received on 381 patients from 54 units over a 12-year period with 90% of procedures being performed over the past 5 years. Balloon-expandable stents (8 types) were used in the majority; self-expanding stents (4 types) were used in 4.5%. The commonest stent was the 10-zig covered Cheatham Platinum stent in 62% of cases. In 10 procedures, the stent embolized requiring surgical retrieval and repair of the defect, resulting in technically successful implantation in 371 of 381 (97.4%). Major complications (surgical drainage of tamponade, pacemaker implantation, surgery for pulmonary vein occlusion, and late stent removal) occurred in 5 patients (1.3%). Repeat catheterization to correct residual leaks was required in 7 patients (1.8%). Thus, 359 of 381 patients (94.2%) had successful correction without major complications or additional catheter interventions. CONCLUSIONS: This article details the exponential uptake of covered stent correction for SVASD during the past 5 years. Cardiopulmonary bypass was avoided in the majority of patients, and major complications were infrequent. Prospective registries with standardized definitions, inclusion criteria, and follow-up and comparative studies with surgery are now required to help support the extension of covered stent correction as an alternative standard-of-care option for patients with an SVASD.