Management of a premature low birth weight neonate with Ebstein anomaly and persistent circular shunt using modified Starnes procedure
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Abstract
Central MessageA critical neonatal Ebstein anomaly can be successfully rescued through the modified Starnes procedure.See Commentaries on pages 212 and 214. A critical neonatal Ebstein anomaly can be successfully rescued through the modified Starnes procedure. See Commentaries on pages 212 and 214. Fetuses with the severe Ebstein anomaly (EA) involving a circular shunt through a patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) and regurgitant pulmonary and tricuspid valves are at high risk for hydrops fetalis and intrauterine demise.1Wertaschnigg D. Manlhiot C. Jaeggi M. Seed M. Dragulescu A. Schwartz S.M. et al.Contemporary outcomes and factors associated with mortality after a fetal or neonatal diagnosis of Ebstein anomaly and tricuspid valve disease.Can J Cardiol. 2016; 32: 1500-1506Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (20) Google Scholar Such neonates require emergent treatment immediately after birth. Treatment options are limited in preterm low birth weight neonates with a significant risk of intracranial hemorrhage.2Wei D. Azen C. Bhombal S. Hastings L. Paquette L. Congenital heart disease in low-birth-weight infants: effects of small for gestational age (SGA) status and maturity on postoperative outcomes.Pediatr Cardiol. 2015; 36: 1-7Crossref PubMed Scopus (12) Google Scholar Here we report a very preterm low birth weight neonate with severe EA and a circular shunt, successfully managed with a modified Starnes procedure, pulmonary artery (PA) banding, and PDA (Video 1). A fetus with severe EA and a circular shunt developed progressive hydrops. Decision was made to deliver electively by cesarean section at 32 weeks of gestation to prevent intrauterine demise. A cardiac operating room (OR) was set up adjacent to the mother's OR to allow for immediate surgical intervention. After birth, the neonate was immediately intubated and brought to the cardiac OR. Postnatal transthoracic echocardiography confirmed the diagnosis: nonanatomic pulmonary atresia with no anterograde flow, a significant circular shunt, and very low (<20 mm Hg) estimated right ventricular systolic pressure. Emergent main PA ligation and right atrial reduction were performed without cardiopulmonary bypass. Sternal closure was electively delayed. Prostaglandin E1 maintained ductal patency and PA perfusion. Several hours later, the patient developed progressive low cardiac output and lactic acidosis due to high pulmonary circulation despite maximal medical therapies. Therefore, it was decided to undertake bilateral PA banding at bedside to control pulmonary blood flow (Figure 1, A) . However, after achieving temporary hemodynamic stability, the patient continued to deteriorate, necessitating emergent reoperation. Cardiopulmonary bypass was instituted using ascending aortic and bicaval cannulation with anterograde cardioplegia. The patient underwent a modified Starnes procedure, consisting of tricuspid valve closure using a 3-mm fenestrated Gore-Tex patch (Figure 1, B), atrial septectomy, and right atrial and ventricular plication at 20 hours of life (Figure 2). PA bands and the PDA were maintained (Figure 1, C) rather than placing a Blalock–Taussig–Thomas (BTT) shunt. Owing to poor oxygenation and low cardiac output with left ventricular dysfunction, the patient required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) initially but was weaned off ECMO at postoperative day 6 with reasonable ventricular and pulmonary function. The postoperative course was complicated by mediastinitis and anuric renal failure requiring peritoneal dialysis. Once renal recovery occurred, the patient underwent placement of a 3.5-mm right BTT shunt, bilateral PA debanding, bilateral PA patch reconstruction, and PDA ligation at age 3 months (corrected age, 1 month). Cardiac catheterization at age 7 months (corrected 5 months) revealed a PA pressure of 16 to 17 mmHg and a pulmonary vascular resistance index of 1.8 Woods units. Bidirectional cavopulmonary shunt was uneventfully performed at age 9 months (corrected 7 months). Currently, the patient is awaiting Fontan completion. Elimination of the circular shunt is the immediate step to secure systemic oxygen delivery in neonates with extreme EA. However, patients still face significant problems with high pulmonary circulation and resultant low systemic oxygen delivery. Two-stage palliation of main PA ligation preceded by modified Starnes has been reported previously, with BTT placement as a part of the Starnes procedure.3Yanase Y. Watanabe M. Ishikawa N. Higami T. Surgical treatment for neonatal Ebstein's anomaly with circular shunting.Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg. 2012; 14: 886-888Crossref PubMed Scopus (5) Google Scholar,4Kajihara N. Asou T. Takeda Y. Kosaka Y. Onakatomi Y. Miyata D. et al.Rapid two-stage Starnes procedure for a symptomatic neonate with Ebstein anomaly.Ann Thorac Surg. 2010; 90: 2073-2075Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (10) Google Scholar We posit that BTT placement in our 1.25-kg neonate would not have solved the high pulmonary blood flow issue owing to an extremely unfavorable shunt size–to–body weight ratio. Bilateral PA banding and PDA is a better approach to titrating and optimizing pulmonary blood flow by tightening or loosening the bands as opposed to placing the smallest available (3 mm) BTT shunt. We previously published a technique of BTT shunt banding to restrict blood flow based on an established formula5Atlin C.R. Haller C. Honjo O. Jegatheeswaran A. Van Arsdell G.S. Balancing pulmonary blood flow: theory, in vitro measurements, and clinical correlation of systemic-to-pulmonary shunt banding.J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2016; 152: 1343-1352.e2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar; however, banding a 3-mm shunt is prone to significant stenosis with any additional tightening. PA band titration is hypothesized to be a more reliable way to control pulmonary blood flow. We speculate that the need for modified Starnes as a rescue procedure was due to the massively dilated right ventricle compressing the left ventricle and the lungs, contributing to low cardiac output. Although the patient required postoperative ECMO, decompression of the right ventricle improved left ventricular filling and facilitated ECMO separation. Our institution follows a management algorithm (Figure 3) for fetal/neonatal cases with severe EA, which assigns them to medical management and/or biventricular repair based on echocardiographic and radiographic stratification of disease severity using a 7-item scale known as the SickKids score (Table 1).1Wertaschnigg D. Manlhiot C. Jaeggi M. Seed M. Dragulescu A. Schwartz S.M. et al.Contemporary outcomes and factors associated with mortality after a fetal or neonatal diagnosis of Ebstein anomaly and tricuspid valve disease.Can J Cardiol. 2016; 32: 1500-1506Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (20) Google Scholar In newborns with a failing, low-pressure- generating right ventricle, we triage to the primary Starnes procedure. Our patient had a SickKids score of 14. For patients with a low or moderate SickKids score,1Wertaschnigg D. Manlhiot C. Jaeggi M. Seed M. Dragulescu A. Schwartz S.M. et al.Contemporary outcomes and factors associated with mortality after a fetal or neonatal diagnosis of Ebstein anomaly and tricuspid valve disease.Can J Cardiol. 2016; 32: 1500-1506Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (20) Google Scholar we prefer conservative therapy of discontinuing prostaglandin E1 with or without PDA ligation and nitric oxide administration.Table 1Fetal severity by SickKids scoreReproduced from Wertaschnigg and colleagues.1Wertaschnigg D. Manlhiot C. Jaeggi M. Seed M. Dragulescu A. Schwartz S.M. et al.Contemporary outcomes and factors associated with mortality after a fetal or neonatal diagnosis of Ebstein anomaly and tricuspid valve disease.Can J Cardiol. 2016; 32: 1500-1506Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (20) Google ScholarVariableWeighting012Cardiothoracic ratio<0.65 0.65-0.75>0.75 Right atrial area index<0.750.75-1.0>1.0Pulmonary forward flowNormalReducedAbsentTricuspid regurgitationNo or mild> MildModerate/severe Doppler gradient—≥40 mm Hg<40 mm HgPulmonary regurgitationNoYesYesEnd-diastolic UA flow—AntegradeAbsent or reversedUA, Umbilical artery. Open table in a new tab UA, Umbilical artery. https://www.jtcvstechniques.org/cms/asset/9c491099-66d6-4e19-950b-efb53a585b19/mmc1.mp4Loading ... Download .mp4 (34.07 MB) Help with .mp4 files Video 1Video summary of the case and our institution's approach to stratification of disease severity in patients with fetal diagnosis of severe Ebstein anomaly. Video available at: https://www.jtcvs.org/article/S2666-2507(21)00127-9/fulltext. Download .jpg (.02 MB) Help with files Video 1Video summary of the case and our institution's approach to stratification of disease severity in patients with fetal diagnosis of severe Ebstein anomaly. Video available at: https://www.jtcvs.org/article/S2666-2507(21)00127-9/fulltext.
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Teacher imitationNot calibrated prevalence, not ground truth. Human validation pending. Learned from the 10,348 direct Codex labels and 10,348 direct Gemma labels. Candidate is the union of thresholded teacher heads; consensus is their intersection. These outputs are machine_predicted_unvalidated and are not human labels or direct frontier model labels.
Codex and Gemma teacher scores by category
| Category | Codex | Gemma |
|---|---|---|
| Metaresearch | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Meta-epidemiology (narrow) | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Meta-epidemiology (broad) | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Bibliometrics | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Science and technology studies | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Scholarly communication | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Open science | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Research integrity | 0.000 | 0.000 |
| Insufficient payload (model declined to judge) | 0.000 | 0.000 |
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Baseline scores from an immature model (maturity gate not passed, 7 training rounds). Scores rank; they never assert a category.
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