Abstract

BackgroundLatin American registries of clinical and demographic profiles of ACHD are scarce. International guidelines classify disease complexity with different approaches. With these two regards, a registry was carried out to examine factors associated with mortality and to compare severity classifications in our population. Methods and resultsCross-sectional study conducted on ACHD between 2018 and 2022 to evaluate clinical and demographic characteristics and to assess the agreement between the 2020 ESC Guidelines and 2018 AHA/ACC Guidelines for the Management of Adults with Congenital Heart Disease using the kappa method. Binomial logistic regression models were used to examine correlates of mortality. 3459 patients were included [56 % women, median age 34 years (IQR 24–50)]; 83.41 % were alive and 4.11 % died. The subjects had the following characteristics: 74.18 % were in NYHA I FC, 87.30 % had SVEF ≥50 %, 18.42 % developed arrhythmias, 58.92 % were surgically repaired, 7.05 % received palliative management, and 0.03 % were in heart transplant protocol. The agreement between ESC and AHA/ACC complexity classifications was low (43.29 %) in moderate ACHD, and high (83.10 %) in severe disease. Mortality was higher in patients with NYHA III-IV FC, arrhythmias and under palliative care. ConclusionThis study found that ESC and AHA/ACC complexity classifications have limited concordance in categorizing moderate complexity CHD. Reparative procedures had lower mortality odds than palliative care.

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