Abstract

New cardiopulmonary bypass devices and new innovative methods are frequently reported in the literature; however, the actual extent to which they are adopted into clinical practice is not well known. We distributed an electronic survey to 289 domestic and international pediatric congenital surgery centers in an effort to measure attributes of current clinical practice. The survey consisted of 107 questions relating to program demographics, equipment, and techniques. Responses were received from 146 (51%) of queried centers and were stratified into five distinct geographic regions (North America, Central and South America, Oceana, Europe, and Asia). Most of the responding centers reported use of hard shell venous reservoirs. Closed venous systems were used at 50% of reporting centers in Central and South America as compared with only 3% in North America and 10% in Asia. Seventy-one percent of the programs used some form of modified ultrafiltration. Use of an arterial bubble detection system varied between 50% use (Central and South America) vs. 100% (North America and Oceana). “Del Nido” cardioplegia is more common in North America (32%) than any other continent, whereas Custodial® HTK solution is much more prevalent in Europe (31%). Wide variation in practice was evident across geographic regions, suggesting opportunities for further investigation and improvement.

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