Abstract

The Berlin Heart EXCOR system has been developed for mechanical circulatory support (MCS) of pediatric patients with terminal heart failure. A recently introduced iteration of the system (EXCOR Venous Cannula, Berlin Heart GmbH, Berlin, Germany) is dedicated to support patients with univentricular physiologies by facilitating implantation of the EXCOR device into the Fontan pathway. We report the worldwide first successful implantation of the EXCOR Venous Cannula in a biventricular support concept for a 12-year-old boy (140 cm, 42.7 kg, body surface area 1.29 m2, Pedimacs Level 2) with severe systemic ventricle dysfunction and failing Fontan circulation. Surgery comprised of standard Berlin Heart EXCOR implantation to support the failing ventricle (12 mm apex / staged 12/9 mm arterial cannula / 50 ml ventricle). Cannulation for subpulmonary EXCOR support was achieved by performing a total cavopulmonary connection takedown with subsequent anastomosis of a staged 12/9 mm outflow cannula to the pulmonary artery and implantation of a 14/18 mm EXCOR Venous Cannula as subpulmonary inflow graft, which was connected to the superior vena cava and Fontan tunnel using GORE-TEX grafts. In the postoperative course, cardiac output and central venous pressures rapidly improved with hepatic and renal functions restoring to age- and condition-specific norm values. The Berlin Heart EXCOR Venous Cannula is the first system for standardized mechanical support of Fontan circulatory failure. In our patient, subpulmonary support restoring a biventricular circulation combined with systemic MCS normalized hemodynamics and reversed end-organ dysfunction.

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