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Ann Thorac Surg 2007;83:1446-1450
© 2007 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons


Original Articles: Cardiovascular

Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn With Transposition of the Great Arteries

Marcus T.R. Roofthooft, MDa,*, Klasina A. Bergman, MDb, Tjalling W. Waterbolk, MDc, Tjark Ebels, MD, PhDc, Beatrijs Bartelds, MD, PhDa, Rolf M.F. Berger, MD, PhDa

a Department of Paediatric Cardiology, Beatrix Children’s Hospital, Groningen, The Netherlands
b Department of Neonatology, Beatrix Children’s Hospital, Groningen, The Netherlands
c Department of Thoracic Surgery, University Medical Centre Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

Accepted for publication November 1, 2006.

* Address correspondence to Dr Roofthooft, Department of Paediatric Cardiology, Beatrix Children’s Hospital, University Medical Centre Groningen, PO Box 30.001, 9700 RB, Groningen, The Netherlands (Email: m.t.r.roofthooft{at}bkk.umcg.nl).


    Abstract
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Patients and Methods
 Results
 Comment
 References
 
Background: Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) in patients with transposition of the great arteries (TGA) is reported to be a high-risk and often therapy-resistant condition, associated with a high mortality. However, data on its incidence and prognosis are scarce and originate mostly from the era before introduction of inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) therapy for PPHN.

Methods: This is a retrospective study of consecutive newborns with TGA, admitted to a tertiary cardiac and neonatal intensive unit over a 10-year period. In this period, iNO therapy was available.

Results: Fourteen out of 112 patients with TGA (12.5%) presented with associated PPHN. The PPHN occurred more frequently in patients with TGA and intact ventricular septum (IVS) compared with those with TGA and ventricular septal defect (13 out of 83 patients versus one out of 29 patients, respectively; p = 0.06, Fisher exact test). Of those newborns, six presented with severe PPHN, whereas eight presented with mild-to-moderate PPHN. Despite currently available treatment modalities, including iNO, four out of 14 patients died before corrective surgical procedures were considered to be an option (TGA/PPHN preoperative mortality 28.6%). These included three out of six patients (50%) with severe PPHN and one out of eight (12.5%) with mild-to-moderate PPHN.

Conclusions: The combination of TGA with PPHN is a serious and often fatal condition. It may jeopardize the usually favorable outcome of newborns with TGA. Despite the introduction of iNO therapy, the combination of TGA and PPHN remains a condition with unacceptable high mortality (in our series). Additional treatment strategies need to be investigated.


    Introduction
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Patients and Methods
 Results
 Comment
 References
 
Transposition of the great arteries (TGA) is the most common cyanotic congenital heart defect presenting in the neonate. Transposition of the great arteries is present in 5% to 7% of patients with congenital heart disease. The TGA has a 60% to 70% male predominance [1, 2]. Hallmark is a discordant ventriculoarterial connection. In TGA the systemic and pulmonary circulation are separated, resulting in hypoxemic systemic and hyperoxemic pulmonary flow. Mixing opportunities, like persistent ductus arteriosus (PDA), atrial septal defect (ASD), or ventricular septal defect (VSD), are obligatory for early survival. Untreated, TGA is a fatal congenital heart defect due to progressive hypoxia and acidosis.

The combination of persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) and TGA has serious implications on treatment and prognosis, with often deleterious outcome [3–6]. Limited data concerning the incidence and prognosis of this condition are available. The estimated incidences are based mainly on case reports or small series in the period before introduction of inhaled nitric oxide (iNO), and range from 1% to 3% in patients with TGA and intact ventricular septum (IVS) [3–7].

Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) is defined as failure of normal pulmonary vascular adaptation at or soon after birth, resulting in increased pulmonary vascular resistance, which exceeds systemic vascular resistance such that pulmonary blood flow is diminished and unoxygenated blood is shunted to the systemic circulation. This condition, usually diagnosed on clinical features, is confirmed by echocardiography [8]. We present the results of a single-center experience concerning the incidence and treatment of PPHN in TGA, with or without ventricular septal defects (VSD/IVS).


    Patients and Methods
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Patients and Methods
 Results
 Comment
 References
 
In a retrospective study, a cohort of consecutive patients with TGA was studied for the presence of associated PPHN. All patients were admitted to a tertiary cardiac and neonatal intensive unit (Beatrix Children’s Hospital, Groningen, The Netherlands) over a 10-year period (January 1995 to January 2005). Our Institutional Medical Ethics committee waived the need of patient consent in this retrospective study, because individual patients were not identified.

At presentation, after optimal ventilation with 100% inspired oxygen, two groups of patients with pulmonary hypertension were defined. Group 1 (severe PPHN), presenting with profound cyanosis and associated with echocardiographic continuous right-to-left shunting (ie, pulmonary to systemic circulation) through a PDA on color flow Doppler and pulsed wave Doppler, or a predominant right-to left shunt through the PDA associated with a preductal to postductal difference in transcutaneous oxygen saturation ({delta}-SO2) 15% or greater, as measured between the right arm and a leg. Group 2, mild-to-moderate PPHN, presenting with echocardiographic bidirectional shunting through the PDA associated with {delta}-SO2 between 5% and 15%.

During the study period, a standard approach was used toward patients with PPHN in combination with a TGA. Intravenous prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) was started as soon as possible. In patients with insufficient mixing at the level of the open foramen ovale a balloon atrioseptostomy was performed. Therapies for PPHN in this group of patients were aimed at lowering pulmonary vascular resistance and improving mixing at the level of the atria and PDA. The ventilator strategy used is meant to reduce pulmonary vascular resistance by improving oxygenation, while aiming for a pH of 7.4 and an arterial CO2 pressure (pCO2) between 4.0 and 5.5 kPa. Ventilator settings were adjusted according to the patient’s pulmonary condition, tidal volume, and arterial blood gas determination. Patients received sedation with morphine and, if necessary, neuromuscular blockade with vecuronium. Inotropic agents (isoprenaline, dopamine, dobutamine, and noradrenaline) and intravenous volume replacement were used aggressively to maintain an adequate arterial blood pressure. During iNO therapy, nitric oxide was introduced into the inspiratory limb of the ventilator (5–40 ppm). In case of failure, intravenous vasodilators (tolazoline, epoprostenol, enoximone) were started in the absence of contraindications (hypotension, renal failure, hemorrhage). During the study period, newborns with major congenital heart defects were not eligible for preoperative cardiac extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in the Netherlands.

Statistical Methods
To compare patients (TGA/PPHN) with VSD versus IVS, a Fisher exact test was used. The same statistic test was used to compare patients with or without PPHN and delayed sternal closure, as well as to compare the mortality in patients (TGA/PPHN) treated with or without iNO therapy. By a {chi}2 test, differences in the incidence of a balloon atrioseptostomy in patients with TGA (PPHN vs non-PPHN) were tested. Differences in length of intensive care unit (ICU) stay or days on ventilatory support after the arterial switch operation (ASO) (PPHN vs non-PPHN) were tested by the Mann-Whitney U test. In all tests, a p value of 0.05 or less was considered significant.


    Results
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Patients and Methods
 Results
 Comment
 References
 
Incidence
Between January 1995 and January 2005, 112 neonates were diagnosed with TGA. Eighty-three patients presented with TGA/IVS, whereas 29 had TGA with VSD. Fourteen patients (12.5%) fulfilled our criteria for PPHN. Of these, 13 had TGA with IVS, whereas one had a small, muscular VSD. Six patients were defined as having severe PPHN and eight had mild-to-moderate PPHN. In the group of severe PPHN the right arm (preductal) oxygen saturation ranged from 30% to 50% (mean {delta}-SO2 = 21%). In the patients with mild-to-moderate PPHN preductal oxygen saturation was observed between 70% and 85% (mean {delta}-SO2 = 12%).

Medical Treatment
All 14 newborns with TGA and PPHN were treated with intravenous prostaglandins E1 (PGE1). Each of these infants had PPHN despite optimal mechanical ventilation and 100% inspired O2. All patients were sedated and paralyzed. In 13 patients (93%) a balloon atrioseptostomy was performed, compared with 53 of the 98 TGA patients without PPHN (54%) (p ≤ 0.01, {chi}2 test). Additional iNO therapy (5 to 40 ppm) was started in 11 patients with TGA and PPHN (six with severe PPHN and five with mild-to-moderate PPHN). The remaining three patients (all with mild-to moderate PPHN) responded well to maximal conservative therapy and did not need iNO. Additional therapy in the PPHN patients consisted of inotropics (isoprenaline [n = 6], dopamine [n = 9], dobutamine [n = 4] and norepinephrine [n = 3]) and intravenous vasodilators (epoprostenol [n = 5], tolazoline [n = 2], and enoximone [n = 1]).

Outcome
Overall mortality (preoperative, operative, in-hospital [30 days] and late mortality) in this cohort of TGA patients was 15 out of 112 (13.4%). Seven of these patients (6.3%) were considered not eligible for corrective surgery because of various comorbidity; therapy-resistant PPHN (n = 4), necrotizing enterocolitis (n = 1), prematurity (gestational age 28 1/7 weeks)(n = 1) and associated debilitating coloboma of the eye, heart anomaly, choanal atresia, retardation, and genital and ear anomalies (CHARGE) syndrome (n = 1).

In 99 of the remaining 105 patients a primary ASO was performed. Six patients underwent alternative surgery; Senning procedure [n = 1], banding of the pulmonary artery ± atrioseptectomy ± modified Blalock-Taussig shunt (n = 5). In four of the latter five patients an ASO was performed at a later stage (see Fig 1). In the surgically treated patients we observed a 30-day mortality of four patients out of 105 (3.9%). Two of these children died operatively from heart failure due to impaired coronary artery perfusion. In the first child the circumflex coronary artery (CX) originated from the right coronary artery (RCA):(I LAD [left anterior descending artery], II RCA-CX), the second child showed a I LAD-RCA, II CX pattern. The third patient developed therapy-resistant pulmonary hypertensive crises postoperatively and died fourteen days after operation (I LAD, II RCA-CX). The fourth patient survived the ASO, despite associated complex coronary anatomy (I ramus descendens anterior, II RCA-CX); however, the patient suffered from cerebral edema and died due to cerebral herniation. In the remaining group of 99 patients who underwent a successful ASO we observed an unusual pattern of the coronary anatomy in 26 patients (p = 0.006 compared with the four out of four patients who died perioperatively) [9].


Figure 1
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Fig 1. Surgical characteristics of transposition of the great arteries (intact ventricular septum/ ventricular septal defect). (ASO = arterial switch operation; PPHN = persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn.)

 
Four patients died during long-term postoperative follow-up (late mortality). One of these patients 16 months after uneventful ASO due to progressive idiopathic-unexplained pulmonary vascular disease not related to left ventricular dysfunction (usual coronary pattern I LAD-CX, II RCA). Three patients died unexpectedly at, respectively, 0.5, 1.5, and 3.75 years of age due to unknown cause, although two of these children had associated complex coronary anatomy and had shown temporary perioperative ischemia (I intramural LAD-CX, II RCA and I two right conal arteries, II LAD-CX-RCA) [9]. Of the 99 patients who underwent a primary ASO, ten had a history of PPHN (group A), whereas 89 had no PPHN (group B).

Considering the postoperative characteristics of ASO in both groups, we observed remarkable differences: patients with PPHN needed significantly longer ventilatory support (mean 8.2 days vs 3.9 days, p = 0.02), and their ICU stay was significantly longer (mean 10.4 days vs 5.5 days, p = 0.03) (Mann-Whitney U test). Delayed sternal closure was observed in one patient of group A and in two patients of group B (p = 0.03, Fisher exact test). In both groups one patient needed iNO therapy (p = 0.2 Fisher exact test). The characteristics of the complicated postoperative course of group A are shown in Table 1. As mentioned, group B showed a 30-day mortality of four patients and a late mortality of four patients. In contrast to group B all patients of group A have survived thus far.


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Table 1 Postoperative Characteristics of Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn (PPHN)/Transposition of the Great Arteries Patients
 
Four out of the 14 patients with TGA and PPHN died (29%) preoperatively, despite optimal conventional therapy including iNO therapy and adequate balloon atrioseptostomy. (see Fig 2). The PPHN that did not resolve despite that this therapy was considered a contraindication to ASO. In the group with severe PPHN the mortality was 50% (three out of six patients). All patients in this group received iNO therapy (10 to 40 ppm) for a median duration of 51 hours (range, 24 to 120 hours). The remaining three patients recovered successfully from PPHN and subsequently underwent an ASO. In the group with mild-to-moderate PPHN, the mortality was 12.5 % (one out of eight). Five of these patients received iNO therapy (10 to 40 ppm) for a median duration of 50 hours (range, 20 to192 hours). One patient, who was severely asphyxiated, died within 24 hours after starting iNO. In a deviation from the standard approach at our institution, a successful rescue ASO was performed in one patient 24 hours after the start of iNO therapy, although the PPHN had not resolved at that time. The remaining six patients in this group underwent a successful ASO after complete recovery of the PPHN.


Figure 2
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Fig 2. Characteristics of transposition of the great arteries and persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (TGA/PPHN) patients.

 

    Comment
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Patients and Methods
 Results
 Comment
 References
 
Untreated, TGA is a fatal congenital heart defect due to progressive hypoxia and acidosis. Heart failure usually develops within the first weeks of life. Patients with reduced mixing opportunities (eg, TGA with IVS and restrictive open foramen ovale and [or] closure of the arterial duct), are the patients who become symptomatic with cyanosis early after birth. This group of patients usually responds well to PGE1 infusion and balloon atrioseptostomy. Patients with TGA and VSD show less cyanosis and usually present at a later time. In general, patients diagnosed as TGA and VSD/IVS have good prognosis after an ASO [10].

Sixteen patients with TGA/IVS and PPHN have been described previously (see Table 2) [3–6, 11]. In total, eight of those patients died in the neonatal period (50%). Inhaled nitric oxide therapy was not available in 11 of these patients. Five patients did receive iNO and survived. They underwent a successful ASO although additional perioperative ECMO was considered necessary in two patients. These limited data may suggest that the introduction of iNO therapy for PPHN may have improved the prognosis of newborns with TGA associated with PPHN (Table 2).


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Table 2 Management of Neonates with Transposition of The Great Arteries/Intact Ventricular Septum and Pulmonary Hypertension
 
Ten years after the introduction of iNO in our institution, we reviewed our patient data concerning patients with TGA and PPHN. The incidence of PPHN in our cohort was higher than reported in previous reports in the literature (12.5% vs 3%) but compatible with the data by El-Segair and colleagues [12]. If only the patients with severe PPHN were considered (group 1; n = 6), an incidence of 5.3% (6 of 112) was found. In this latter group all patients had TGA/IVS; three patients survived with iNO therapy (maximum duration 48 hours). The three nonsurvivors showed therapy-resistant PPHN with early (n = 2; maximum 48 hours) or intermediate mortality (n = 1, after eight days iNO). In these patients, additional treatment with enoximone (Perfan; Hoechst Marion Roussel, Höchst am Main, Germany), epoprostenol (Flolan; GlaxoSmithKline, Boronia, Australia), and isoprenaline was attempted unsuccessfully. The incidence and clinical outcomes in our series are comparable to those in the report of Luciani and colleagues [6]. In contrast to their treatment approach, preoperative cardiac ECMO was not used in the Netherlands during the study period. Its role in the management of TGA and PPHN is still unclear. The international experience with postoperative cardiac ECMO is limited but promising. So far, four cases of TGA/PPHN in which ECMO was used have been described in the literature. The results in those cases were promising; however, the high incidence of cerebral hemorrhage, associated with ECMO, may limit the use of mechanical cardiopulmonary support in those patients [13, 14]. One patient in our series successfully underwent a so-called "rescue switch," in which the ASO was performed in the presence of clinical PPHN. However, due to our limited experience we are not able to draw any conclusions regarding the place of such a procedure in the treatment of TGA/PPHN. The role of this approach needs further exploration.

Although iNO is considered to be the first choice therapy in neonates with PPHN, it is also known that about 30% of these patients are nonresponders to iNO [15]. This lack of response may be explained by the fact that PPHN is a complex, multifactorial disorder associated with a wide array of cardiopulmonary disorders. Airway obstruction or edema may decrease the response to iNO and atelectasis may cause intrapulmonary shunting and hypoxia, which is not remedied by vasodilators. A variety of cellular mechanisms is involved in the complex process of perinatal pulmonary adaptation and, consequently, in disturbances of this process. Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn is associated with pulmonary endothelial and vascular smooth muscle cell dysfunction that may be caused by multiple factors, including hypoxia, inflammation, and mechanical forces. These vascular cells are crucially important in both pulmonary vascular adaptation and homeostasis. Its dysfunction may lead to a disturbed vasoconstrictor-vasodilator balance in the pulmonary vasculature.

Animal experiments have suggested a role for various vasoactive pathways in the pathogenesis of PPHN, including the endothelin-1 pathway with its A and B receptors, the prostacyclin-cGMP and the nitric oxide-cAMP pathway, and, finally, the vascular endothelial growth factor- fetal liver kinase receptor-1- kinase insert domain receptor pathway [16–18]. Treatment solutions are likely to be found also on multiple levels. Further studies are needed to unravel the cellular mechanisms of PPHN and to identify new treatment targets for newborns with this devastating disease.

The surgical mortality in our series is low (3.9%) and congruent with other reported series on the ASO for TGA [19,20]. However, preoperative mortality due to various comorbidity, a number that is usually not reported in surgical series, was 6% in our series. It should be noted that such a number importantly affects the overall survival rate in newborns with TGA.

The combination of TGA with PPHN is a serious and often fatal condition. It may jeopardize the usually favorable outcome of newborns with TGA. Its mechanism is, to a great extent, still unsolved. Restrictive patent foramen ovale and (or) premature closure of the ductus arteriosus have been suggested as potential causes of PPHN. Fetal echocardiography might play a role in identifying these fetuses with TGA at risk for PPHN. Our data do not allow conclusions on the value of prenatal echocardiography in these patients because none of the PPHN patients was diagnosed antenatally. Because of the retrospective nature of this study, and incomplete data regarding restriction of the PFO in the total patient group, it was not possible to determine the relative risk for PPHN in patients with restrictive PFO.

Despite the introduction of iNO therapy, the combination of TGA and PPHN remains a serious and often fatal condition. Newborns in which the PPHN could be successfully treated preoperatively, underwent ASO with good operative results and survival. However, the role of additional treatment modalities in patients with therapy-resistant PPHN, including new pulmonary vasoactive drugs, the perioperative use of ECMO, and the "rescue switch procedure," needs further investigation.


    References
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Patients and Methods
 Results
 Comment
 References
 

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