Cardiovascular profile and biophysical profile scores predict short‐term prognosis in infants with congenital heart defect

2019 
AIM: To predict the prognosis of infants with congenital heart disease, accurate prenatal diagnosis of structural abnormality and heart failure are both necessary. The aim of this study was to investigate whether cardiovascular profile (CVP) and biophysical profile (BP) scores are useful for predicting prognosis in infants with congenital heart defect (CHD). METHODS: A retrospective review of singletons prenatally diagnosed with CHD at a tertiary pediatric cardiac center between 2011 and 2015 was undertaken. RESULTS: A total of 202 patients with CHD were analyzed. Perinatal and infant deaths occurred in 16 (7.9%) and 10 cases (5.0%), respectively. Infants with the last CVP score ≤ 5 had 18.7-fold higher perinatal mortality than those with a last CVP score > 5 (P   6 (P < 0.01). Infants with a CVP score decrease in utero had 4.5-fold higher infant mortality than those with an increase or no change (P < 0.01). Multivariate analysis showed that single-ventricle physiology, pre-term birth at <37 weeks of gestation, last CVP score ≤ 5, and last BP score ≤ 6 were independent predictors of perinatal mortality. Single-ventricle physiology and a CVP score decrease were independent predictors of infant mortality. CONCLUSION: CVP and BP scores are useful for predicting perinatal prognosis in infants with CHD. A CVP score decrease in utero is associated with infant mortality, suggesting that serial CVP score assessment may be useful for management planning.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []