Abstract

Introduction: Coronary artery transfer is the most important technical point in the arterial switch operation (ASO). Intra-operative echocardiography identifies aberrancies in coronary artery Doppler profiles guiding immediate surgical management. Objective: We sought to determine whether abnormal intra-operative coronary artery Doppler profiles are associated with major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE; death, transplantation, heart failure, arrhythmia, need for coronary re-intervention) following ASO at 30-days, 5 & 10 years. Methods: Single centre retrospective review of patients undergoing ASO between 2009 - 2022. Transesophageal or epicardial intra-operative coronary artery Doppler profiles were analysed. Patient variables were abstracted from records. Freedom from MACE was estimated using Kaplan-Meier methods. Results: 347 patients were included. Coronary anatomy was usual (1LCx2R) in 237 (68%), single sinus ostia in 24 (7%), intramural in 14 (4 %). Overall 30-day MACE was 11.2% [8.3%, 15.1%], increasing to 25% [12.1, 47.4%] with single sinus ostia & 35.7% [16.7%, 65.7%] with intramural. Overall 5 & 10-year MACE was 16.5% [12.9, 20.9%], 33.8% [18.5%, 56.4%] with single sinus ostia & 50.0% [27.8%, 77.1%] with intramural. A higher probability of MACE was seen with coronary Doppler reverse flow, absence of normal pattern (Table 1) and a higher peak velocity (Figure 1). Overall 30-day mortality was 1.2% [95%CI 0.4%, 3.0%] and at 5 & 10 years was 6.5% [4.3%, 9.8%]. Conclusions: Intra-operative abnormal coronary artery Doppler profiles during ASO may identify those at highest risk of early and late adverse events, guiding follow-up surveillance strategies.

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