Abstract

BackgroundMechanical circulatory support (MCS) in pediatric patients remains challenging because of small body size, limited availability of approved devices, and the variety of etiologies, including biventricular and univentricular physiologies. We report our single-center experience with MCS in pediatric patients in terms of survival and adverse events. MethodsOutcome, etiologic, and demographic data of pediatric patients implanted with a long-term MCS device between 2011 and 2019 at the Medical University of Vienna were retrospectively collected and analyzed. Overall survival and freedom of treatment-related adverse events at 1 year were investigated by Kaplan–Meier analyses and stratified for circulation (biventricular vs univentricular), age group (<6 years vs >6 years), and pump technology (pulsatile ventricular assist device [p-VAD] vs continuous flow pump [cf-VAD]). ResultsOne-year survival of all 33 pediatric patients (median, 4 years; interquartile range, 0-13 years) was 73%, with a tendency toward better outcomes in patients with biventricular circulation than in those with univentricular circulation (80%; n = 25 vs 50%; n = 8; P = .063). The trends toward better survival probability in older patients and in patients with cf-VADs did not reach statistical significance (63.2% vs 85.7%; P = .165 and 82.4% vs 62.5%; P = .179, respectively). Freedom from adverse events was higher in older patients (57.1% vs 5.6%; P < .001) and in the cf-VAD group (52.9% vs 0%; P < .001), with pump thrombosis as the main discriminator. ConclusionsMCS is a promising therapy for a broad spectrum of pediatric patients, irrespective of heart failure etiology, age, and pump type. With increasing experience, improved devices, and patient selection, MCS may become a valuable treatment option for patients with univentricular hearts.

Highlights

  • Mechanical circulatory support (MCS) in pediatric patients remains challenging because of small body size, limited availability of approved devices, and the variety of etiologies, including biventricular and univentricular physiologies

  • MCS is a promising therapy for a broad spectrum of pediatric patients, irrespective of heart failure etiology, age, and pump type

  • Medical progress in the past decades has facilitated the survival of children born with univentricular heart diseases until adulthood, resulting in a rising number of patients with univentricular circulation.[1]

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to analyze pediatric MCS patients with univentricular or biventricular circulation to explore survival and adverse events with respect to age and device type

Methods
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