ObjectiveThe study objective was to determine the short-term incidence of innominate artery stenosis for neonates who underwent direct innominate artery cannulation during the Norwood procedure.MethodsThis is a retrospective, single-institution review of 92 patients who underwent the Norwood procedure with direct innominate artery cannulation from 2006 to 2017. The primary outcome was angiographic evidence of patency at pre-Glenn cardiac catheterization. Patient characteristics, intraoperative surgical and hemodynamic measurements, and postoperative neurologic findings were recorded.ResultsAt a median age of 5.0 days, 92 neonates underwent the Norwood procedure with direct innominate artery cannulation. These patients underwent cardiac catheterization at a median of 3.0 months after the index operation. In 5 of 92 patients with catheterization images available for review, there was angiographic evidence of mild innominate artery stenosis, and none had moderate or severe stenosis. Review of follow-up records did not reveal evidence of clinically significant stenosis or innominate artery reintervention.ConclusionsIn neonates undergoing the Norwood procedure with direct innominate cannulation, innominate artery stenosis was uncommon and clinically significant stenosis did not occur.