| Literature DB >> 29907127 |
Yuhao Wu1,2,3,4, Zhichao Wu5, Junmeng Zheng6, Yonggang Li1,2,3,4, Yuehang Zhou1,2,3,4, Hongyu Kuang7,2,3,4, Xin Jin1,2,3,4, Chun Wu8,9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUD: A meta-analysis was performed to compare the differences in outcomes between sutureless technique and conventional surgery for primary repair of Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Connection(TAPVC).Entities:
Keywords: Congenital heart disease; Conventional surgery; Meta-analysis; Sutureless technique; Total anomalous pulmonary venous connection
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29907127 PMCID: PMC6003069 DOI: 10.1186/s13019-018-0756-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiothorac Surg ISSN: 1749-8090 Impact factor: 1.637
Fig. 1Flowchart of process for literature screening for this meta-analysis
Characteristics and quality assessment of included studies
| Author | Publication year | Study design | Surgical approach | Patients M/F (sex) | Type of TAPVC (supracardiac/car-diac/infracar-diac/mixed) | Weight (Kg) | Age | Preoperative PVO (n) | Follow-up time | NOS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gao [ | 2017 | Retrospective | ST | 56/25 | 63/0/14/4 | 4.3(3.3–5.3)b | 60(25.5–150)d | 24 | 12 ma | 7 |
| Cui [ | 2016 | Retrospective | ST | 14 | NA | 3.5 ± 0.8 | 1.8 ± 0.4 m | NA | 46 ma | 6 |
| Shi [ | 2017 | Retrospective | ST | 78 | 59/2/13/4 | NA | 323.7 ± 23.8d | 35 | 23.2(1–112)m | 7 |
| Yamashita [ | 2013 | Retrospective | ST | 5/2 | 4/0/2/1 | 3.4(3–8) | 119(55–425)d | 6 | 3.9 ± 2.8y | 6 |
| Yanagawa [ | 2011 | Retrospective | ST | 12/9 | 12/4/5/0 | 3.3(1.9–5) | 11(1–128)d | 17 | 21.1(0.2–104.8)m | 7 |
| Honjo [ | 2010 | Retrospective | ST | 2/6 | 0/0/0/8 | 3.8 ± 0.6 | 33 ± 26 d | 7 | 50 ± 56 m | 6 |
| Lo Rito [ | 2015 | Retrospective | ST | 37/32 | 32/6/16/15 | 3.6(3.1–4) | 18(2–52)d | 33 | 6.4yc | 7 |
a median value b median value and range c mean value
d days, m months, y years
ST Sutureles technique group, CS Conventional surgery group, NOS Newcastle-Ottawa scale, NA Not available
The associated anomalies of included TAPVC patients
| Study | Associated anomalies(n) |
|---|---|
| Gao [ | NA |
| Cui [ | 2 SV anatomy/PA stenosis; 2 unroofed coronary sinus syndrome; 1 DORV; 1 CoA; 1 VSD |
| Shi [ | 568 PDA; 19 VSD; 2 CoA; 1 TOF; 52 PA stenosis; |
| Yamashita [ | 8 PA stenosis;1 PV atresia/VSD; 1 Cor triatriatum; 1 Coronary artery fistula |
| Yanagawa [ | NAa |
| Honjo [ | 2 DORV; 2 Cor triatriatum; 1 PV atresia/VSD; 1 RVOTO |
| Lo Rito [ | 5 VSD; 3 CoA; 3 DORV; 2 TA; 2 AVSD |
a This study was based on isolated TAPVC and patients associated with cardiac lesions were excluded
SV Single ventricle anatomy, PA Pulmonary artery, DORV Double-outlet right ventricle, CoA Coarctation of the aorta, TOF Trilogy of fallot, PV Pulmonary vein, RVOTO Right ventricular outflow tract obstruction, VSD ventricular septal defect, TA Truncus arteriosus, AVSD Atrioventricular septal defect, NA Not available
Fig. 2Publication bias analysis by funnel plot
Fig. 3Forest plot of meta-analysis of CPB time
Fig. 4Forest plot of meta-analysis of aortic cross-clamp time
Post-operative death of included studies
| Study | Post-operative death(n) |
|---|---|
| Gao [ | NAa |
| Cui [ | 1 SVC thrombosis; 1 LCOS; 8 PVO |
| Shi [ | 10 LCOS; 10 PAH; 5 respiratory failure; 4 MODS; 1 intracranial hemorrhage; 1 sepsis; 10 PVO; 4 death with unknown causes; 2 none-cardiac death; 4 failed to recover from bypass |
| Yamashita [ | 3 PVO; 1 bleeding |
| Yanagawa [ | 1 none-cardiac death; 1 PVO |
| Honjo [ | 2 sudden cardiac arrest; 2 PVO; 1 LCOS |
| Lo Rito [ | 4 LCOS; 3 refractory arrhythmia; 3 PAH; 1 PE; 1 sepsis; 4 PVO; 5 comorbidities without evidence of PVO |
a Only the numbers of death was available and the details of post-operative death were absent
SVC superior vena cava, LCOS Low cardiac output syndrome, PVO Pulmonary vein obstruction, PAH Pulmonary artery hypertension, MODS Multiple organs dysfunction syndrome, PE Pulmonary artery embolism, NA Not available
Fig. 5Forest plot of meta-analysis of post-operative mortality
Fig. 6Forest plot of meta-analysis of hospitalization time
Post-operative PVO and strategy of re-operation
| Study | Surgical approach | Post-operative PVO(n) | Strategy of post-operative PVO underwent re-operation | Total number of operation(n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gao [ | ST | 2 | NAa | NA |
| Cui [ | ST | NA | NA | NA |
| Shi [ | ST | 10 | 12 sutureless technique; 7 patch augmentation; 5 fibrous resectionb | 792b |
| Yamashita [ | ST | 1 | 1 sutureless technique | 8 |
| Yanagawa [ | ST | 1 | No patient required re-operation | 21 |
| Honjo [ | ST | 1 | No patient required re-operation | 8 |
| Lo Rito [ | ST | 5 | 1 fibrous resection; 1 sutureless technique | 71 |
a Only the numbers of PVO was available and lack of details of post-operative PVO
b Strategy of post-operative PVO underwent re-operation was presented totally
c Two patients in the conventional repair group underwent re-operation without description of details
ST Sutureles technique group, CS Conventional surgery group, SI Stent implantation, NA Not available
Fig. 7Forest plot of meta-analysis of occurrence rate of post-operative PVO
Fig. 8Forest plot of meta-analysis of occurrence rate of re-operation due to PVO