Abstract

BackgroundPregnancy in women with Fontan physiology poses a significant management challenge and is deemed high risk. The aim of this study is to describe short and long-term pregnancy outcomes in women who have undergone Fontan palliation and propose a novel risk-stratification model specific to women with a Fontan heart.MethodsWe undertook a single-centre, retrospective cohort study of all female Fontan patients (n = 78) from 1991–2015. We recorded pregnancy outcome, maternal cardiovascular and obstetric complications and fetal outcome. We propose a risk stratification model to identify those women who might be at highest risk of adverse outcomes during pregnancy.ResultsTwenty-one women had 55 pregnancies, with 13 (24%) live births and 38 (69%) spontaneous miscarriages (p < 0.001). Eight (62%) out of 13 live birth pregnancies incurred maternal cardiovascular complications and six (46%) experienced maternal obstetric complications. Median gestational age at delivery was 32(27–39) weeks with 12 out of 13 (92%) pregnancies resulting in pre-term delivery. There were more pregnancies (OR 4.90, 95% CI 1.46–16.42, p ≤ 0.01) and a trend towards a higher proportion of live births (OR 7.60, 95% CI 1.81–31.97, p = 0.06), in the ‘lower risk’ compared to those women in the ‘very high risk’ group. There were no maternal deaths.ConclusionsWe observed a high first trimester miscarriage rate, significant maternal cardiovascular and obstetric complication rates and a high rate of pre-term births in pregnant Fontan women. Our risk stratification model requires further investigation but may identify those women at particularly high risk of a poor outcome, and inform realistic pre-pregnancy counselling.

Highlights

  • Pregnancy in women with Fontan physiology poses a significant management challenge and is deemed high risk

  • A retrospective case review was undertaken of all the women with a Fontan circulation who were managed under the care of the combined Cardiology/Obstetric service from January 1991 to December 2015

  • Nine out of ten women who completed a pregnancy were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class I-II

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Pregnancy in women with Fontan physiology poses a significant management challenge and is deemed high risk. The aim of this study is to describe short and long-term pregnancy outcomes in women who have undergone Fontan palliation and propose a novel risk-stratification model specific to women with a Fontan heart. The creation of a Fontan circulation has improved life expectancy for people born with functionally single ventricle congenital heart disease (CHD). Pregnancy is associated with considerable physiological stress. The normal heart can increase heart rate and stroke volume to adapt to changes in systemic vascular resistance and blood volume [4]. Patients with a Fontan circulation tolerate preload changes poorly, and their. Pregnancyrelated haemodynamic changes confer a considerable burden on the Fontan heart [5]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call