Abstract

As patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) increasingly live into adulthood, reoperative surgery is frequently required. While half of these are valve-related procedures, little is known regarding early and late outcomes, and factors associated with adverse outcomes. From 1993-2022, 1,960 adult CHD (ACHD) patients underwent repeat median sternotomy at our institution. Of these, 502 patients (26%) underwent intervention on ≥2 valves and constituted the study cohort. The median age was 39 (27, 51) years and 275 patients (55%) were females. A second sternotomy was performed in 265 patients (53%), third in 135 (27%), fourth in 75 (15%), and ≥fifth in 27 (5%). Interventions were performed on 2 valves in 436 patients (87%), 3 valves in 64 patients (12%), and 4 valves in 2 patients (1%). The most common combinations were pulmonary and tricuspid in 241 patients (48%), followed by mitral and tricuspid in 85 (17%), aortic and pulmonary in 42 (8%), and aortic and mitral in 41 (8%). Early mortality was 4.2% overall and 2.7% for elective operations. Non-elective operations and CHD of major complexity were independently associated with early mortality. Median follow-up was 14 years. One, 5-, and 10-year survival were 93.6%, 89.3%, and 79.5%, respectively. Factors independently associated with overall mortality were age, ventricular dysfunction, coronary artery disease, renal failure, double valve replacement, non-elective operations, and bypass time. Multiple valve interventions are common and confer low early mortality in the elective setting. Referral prior to ventricular dysfunction and in an elective setting optimizes outcomes.

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