During this session, investigators unveiled findings from the largest multicenter study of post-arterial switch operations (ASO) that resulted in increased survival rates for adolescents and adult patients – as well as an increase in the potential for these patients to require cardiac reoperations to address arterial switch related complications that arise later in life.
At day two's presentation on “Burden of Reoperative Cardiac Surgery among Adolescents and Adults Who Have Undergone Prior Arterial Switch Operation: Society of Thoracic Surgeons Database Analysis,” Bret Mettler, MD, from Johns Hopkins University, examined a multi-year assessment of the prevalence and types of cardiac surgical interventions in patients who previously underwent ASO using data from the STS National Database.
“Anatomical repair of transposition of the great arteries (TGA) and related anomalies by arterial switch operation (ASO) achieves a normal anatomic and physiologic cardiac configuration,” said Dr. Mettler. “And as survival rates have increased, so have the potential for these patients to require cardiac reoperations to address resulting ASO-related complications.”
As most reoperations involved multiple procedures, the presentation examined how a hierarchical stratification of procedure categories was established, with each eligible surgical hospitalization assigned to the single highest applicable hierarchical category.
Dr. Mettler's presentation also examined implications for surgical counseling, post-operative clinical surveillance, and therapeutic management. An analysis of the role of procedural prevalence, timing, categories, trends, and the growing number of reoperations was discussed.