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T h e H e rma H e a r t C e n te r, C h i l d re n ’ s H o s p i t al o f W i s c o n s i n The Borderline Left Ventricle: What is it? Recruit it or Forget it? American Association for Thoracic Surgery Seattle, WA, April 25, 2015 James S. Tweddell, MD Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin. Professor of Surgery and Pediatrics, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin. Disclosures • Financial disclosures – Consultant for CorMatrix • Off label use of drugs or devices -None The borderline left ventricle Congenital malformations with a moderately hypoplastic left ventricle in which intervention is required in the neonatal period • Critical aortic stenosis (HLHS AS/MS) • Lesions where coarctation/arch hypoplasia is a constant finding with or without VSD Coarctation with non-apex forming right ventricle Hypoplastic left heart complex Critical aortic stenosis • One of first lesion to be studied • How small is too small? Kearney DL Sem Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 2013 Aortic valve stenosis • Risk factors for poor outcome 1981-Latson – LV cross-sectional area <1.6cm2 1983 Mocellin – LVEDV < 80% normal and EFE 1983 Keane – LVEDV < 20ml/m2 1986 Gundry – EFE, LVEDP >26mmHg, LVEF < 42% 1987 Pelech – Pre-op shock/CHF, cardiomegaly, RVH, mitral valve <11mm, Ao valve < 6mm, LVEDP > 20mmHg, LVEF < 40% 1988 Hammon- LVEDV < 20ml/m2 and MPAP > 50mmHg 1989 Zeevi – LVEDV < 60-80% 1990 Karl – LVEDV < 60%, non-apex forming LV 1991 Leung-mitral valve <9mm, LV-aortic junction<5mm 1991 Parson- LV cross-sectional area <2.0cm2, LVEDV < 20ml/m2, LVEDD <13mm Aortic valve stenosis • Risk factors for poor outcome 1981-Latson – LV cross-sectional area <1.6cm2 1983 Mocellin – LVEDV < 80% normal and EFE 1983 Keane – LVEDV < 20ml/m2 1986 Gundry – EFE, LVEDP >26mmHg, LVEF < 42% 1987 Pelech – Pre-op shock/CHF, cardiomegaly, RVH, mitral valve <11mm, Ao valve < 6mm, LVEDP > 20mmHg, LVEF < 40% 1988 Hammon- LVEDV < 20ml/m2 and MPAP > 50mmHg 1989 Zeevi – LVEDV < 60-80% 1990 Karl – LVEDV < 60%, non-apex forming LV 1991 Leung-mitral valve <9mm, LV-aortic junction<5mm 1991 Parson- LV cross-sectional area <2.0cm2, LVEDV < 20ml/m2, LVEDD <13mm Aortic valve stenosis • Risk factors for poor outcome 1981-Latson – LV cross-sectional area <1.6cm2 1983 Mocellin – LVEDV < 80% normal and EFE 1983 Keane – LVEDV < 20ml/m2 1986 Gundry – EFE, LVEDP >26mmHg, LVEF < 42% 1987 Pelech – Pre-op shock/CHF, cardiomegaly, RVH, mitral valve <11mm, Ao valve < 6mm, LVEDP > 20mmHg, LVEF < 40% 1988 Hammon- LVEDV < 20ml/m2 and MPAP > 50mmHg 1989 Zeevi – LVEDV < 60-80% 1990 Karl – LVEDV < 60%, non-apex forming LV 1991 Leung-mitral valve <9mm, LV-aortic junction<5mm 1991 Parson- LV cross-sectional area <2.0cm2, LVEDV < 20ml/m2, LVEDD <13mm LVEDV < 20ml/m2 • 43 patients undergoing valvotomy for critical AS • Threshold Scoring: • • • • LV long axis ratio < 0.8 aortic root < 3.5cm/m2 mitral valve area < 4.75cm2/m2 LV mass < 35gm/m2 > 2 risk of mortality = 100% • Discriminating equation: 14.0(BSA) + 0.943(iRoot) + 4.78(LAR) + 0.157(iMVA) – 12.03 • Score <-0.35 predicted death with 90% accuracy following aortic valvotomy for patients with isolated aortic stenosis Circ 1991 Kearney DL 2013 • Neonates with coarctation/arch hypoplasia can have LVEDV < 20ml/m2 and survive with simple coarctation repair. Non-apex forming left ventricles Small LVEDVs Am Heart J 1997 J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1999 • 20 neonates with coarctation and small LVs Antegrade ascending aortic flow Ductal dependent • Rhodes score < -0.35 (predicting need for univentricular repair) • Smallest LV volume 13.8 ml/m2 • Coarctation repair via left thoracotomy • No early or late deaths • Hypoplasia of the left heart • Aortic and mitral valve hypoplasia without valvar stenosis or atresia • Hypoplasia of the LV, LVOTO, ascending aorta and arch with coarctation • Antegrade blood flow in the ascending aorta and proximal brachiocephalic vessels • No endocardial fibroelastosis (EFE) Ann Thorac Surg 1998 Hypoplastic left heart complex • Initial report was 11 pts Weight 3.59 ± 0.49 Kg 9 hospital survivors (82%) Mean duration of vent support 12 ± 7 days Prolonged inotropic support 1 late death 9 reoperations in 6 patients • 4 patients underwent 6 reoperations for LVOTO • 2 patients underwent 3 reoperations for recurrent arch obstruction Tchervenkov CI et al Ann Thorac Surg 1998 Hypoplastic left heart complex • Structures increased in size Variable Preop MV diameter 32.2 ± 7.0 mm/m2 -2.4 38.5 ± 7.0 mm/m2 -1.6 <0.01 LVOT diam. 17.8 ± 3.1 mm/m2 -5.6 21.9 ± 5.8 mm/m2 -3.6 <0.01 LVEDD 56.2 ± 7.7 mm/m2 -2.7 67.0 ± 18.1 mm/m2 -2.0 <0.10 LVEDV 13.6 ± 8.6 mL/m2 -5.1 19.0 ± 7.7 mL/m2 -3.6 NS LVESV 4.2 ± 2.9 mL/m2 -3.1 8.0 ± 4.4 mL/m2 -2.0 <0.10 LV/RV ratio 0.87 ± 0.08 Tchervenkov CI et al Ann Thorac Surg 1998 Z Before Discharge 1.09 ± 0.10 Z p <0.01 Hypoplastic left heart complex • Structures increased in size Variable Preop MV diameter 32.2 ± 7.0 mm/m2 -2.4 38.5 ± 7.0 mm/m2 -1.6 <0.01 LVOT diam. 17.8 ± 3.1 mm/m2 -5.6 21.9 ± 5.8 mm/m2 -3.6 <0.01 LVEDD 56.2 ± 7.7 mm/m2 -2.7 67.0 ± 18.1 mm/m2 -2.0 <0.10 LVEDV 13.6 ± 8.6 mL/m2 -5.1 19.0 ± 7.7 mL/m2 -3.6 NS LVESV 4.2 ± 2.9 mL/m2 -3.1 8.0 ± 4.4 mL/m2 -2.0 <0.10 LV/RV ratio 0.87 ± 0.08 Tchervenkov CI et al Ann Thorac Surg 1998 Z Before Discharge 1.09 ± 0.10 Z p <0.01 Hypoplastic left heart complex • LV compliance improves “some growth of LV structures was already observed at the time of hospital discharge” Tchervenkov 1998 Are these dramatic changes in size due to growth? • Or changes in preload and afterload? These echos were 2 weeks apart Are the changes due to growth? • Or simply to changes in loading? Grosse-Wortmann 2008 Are the changes due to growth? • Or simply to changes in loading? Grosse-Wortmann 2008 Are the changes due to growth? • Or simply to changes in loading? 36 ± 9 days 36 ± 9 days Minich 1997 Are the changes due to growth? • Or simply to changes in loading? 24 hours Tchervenkov 1998 Am J Cardiol 1973 1. Preload starvation is a rare cause of LV hypoplasia Conclusion – Normal cardiac morphogenesis requires blood flow– 2. LV development is sensitive to increases in afterload but resistant to directed remodeling in addition to intrinsic patterning. changes in preload LV development is afterload sensitive LV development is not as sensitive to preload The fetal left ventricle is preparing for big things! • The right ventricle is the workhorse of the fetal circulation • Fetal right heart output 1.4 X > left heart output • But the left ventricle is preparing to take on sole ownership of the systemic circulation Mielke 2001 Unmasking the potential LV At birth: • • • • LV output doubles Dramatic increase in left ventricular end-diastolic dimension Mitral valve area doubles Are we unmasking this potential in patients in abnormal loading? Agata Y et al J Pediatr 1991 I am making the left ventricle grow! So why are the criteria for an adequate LV different for different lesions? Neonatal LV adaptation is limited in patients with critical AS • • • • • In-utero cavitary hypertension Dilatation Hypertrophy Endomyocardial ischemia Endocardial fibroelastosis LV compliance impaired even before EFE develops? Lesions with coarctation/arch hypoplasia with antegrade aortic flow and without EFE (coarctation with nonapex forming LVs, hypoplastic left heart complex) have preserved neonatal adaptation. Immediate postnatal LV growth? The dramatic acute dimensional changes following repair of borderline LV lesions are the result of normalization of loading conditions that permit full expression of left ventricular phenotype This not evidence of growth but simple unmasking of the left ventricle potential Immediate remodeling can be dramatic but continued remodeling is unpredictable The available predictive models • Colan et al 2006 Revised discriminant model predicting 2V survival among neonates with critical aortic stenosis with intact ventricular septum and MV Z-score > -2. • Hickey et al 2007 Univentricular repair survival assessment tool. Includes patients with VSD and arch obstruction • http://www.chssdc.org/content/chss-scoreneonatal-critical-aortic-stenosis 10.98 (BSA) + 0.56 (aortic valve • annulus z-score) + 5.89 (LAR) 0.79 (presence of grade 2 or 3 EFE) - 6.78 New cut-off <-0.65 90% accurate in predicting biventricular survival in patients with MV z-score > -2 Risk factors for poor outcome : 1V repair: TR, ↓mitral annulus, ↓ dominant ventricular length, large VSD 2V repair: ↓ LVOT dimension, EFE, LV dysfx, aortic arch hypoplasia Small LV structures, ductal dependency with retrograde arch flow and endocardial fibroelastosis are not a good start for a 2V repair Is there a survival advantage to 2V repair? • 362 neonates with critical LVOTO • No survival advantage to 2V repair p = 0.07 …maybe a hypoplastic LV results in chronic low CO the major determinant of outcome is the degree of LV hypoplasia and the only difference between 1V and 2V repair is which atrium has chronically elevated pressure? Hickey EJ et al J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2007 Cardiology in the Young 2005 •Healthy •Single Ventricle (n=55) •TGA (n=54) •Complex 2 Ventricle (n=73) Parent Report - PedsQL Results, n = 182 Summary • To make sense of all of this we need better reporting of results Lesion specific Age specific Results in addition to survival and reintervention • Exercise tolerance • Quality of life • Neurodevelopmental outcome Law of the Instrument Law of the Instrument "I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.” Abraham H. Maslow (1966) The future • We need strategies in addition to surgery and catheter intervention • What we really need is a way to achieve a hyperplastic response Reactivation of gene pathways, stem cell therapy, use of paracrine effects Hickey EJ, Caldarone CA, McCrindle BW J Am Coll Cardiol 2012 Thank you Participant in STS Congenital Heart Database Public Reporting