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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2006;30:250-255
© 2006 Elsevier Science NL
a Cardiovascular Institute, School of Medicine of Brescia, Brescia, Italy
b Cardiovascular Institute, School of Medicine of Padova, Padova, Italy
Received 7 January 2006; received in revised form 18 April 2006; accepted 1 May 2006.
* Corresponding author. Address: Institute of Cardiovascular Surgery, Piazza Spedali Civili, 1, 25100 Brescia, Italy. Tel.: +39 030 399 6400; fax: +39 030 399 6096. (Email: bottio{at}med.unibs.it).
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Troponin-I Echocardiographic follow-up Congenital heart defects Prognostic value
| 1. Introduction |
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The present prospective study was undertaken to investigate whether a postoperative Tn-I value higher than 35 µg/l, associated to high risk of early potential adverse major cardiac events, it has a long-term outcome predictive value as in the early perioperative period, after surgery for congenital heart defects (CHD).
| 2. Materials |
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According to the complexity of cardiac defects, the patients were arbitrarily divided into two groups:
One hundred and four patients (20%) had undergone previous palliative and/or corrective cardiac operations. For the entire population, the mean length of ICU stay was 2.2 ± 3 days (median 1 day). Overall, 14 patients died (in-hospital mortality 2.7%). Prolonged ventilation (15.3% incidence), due to either cardiac or respiratory failure, and acute renal failure (16.5% incidence) were the prevalent postoperative complications. In 3.6% of patients a permanent neurological dysfunction occurred in the postoperative period. Other complications (such as bleeding requiring sternal revision, pulmonary and blood infections) were observed in 5.2% and 3.7% of patients, respectively.
2.1.1 Study group
Among these 520 patients, 70 (13.4%, mean age 2.6 ± 5.8 months; 43 males and 27 females) presented with perioperative low cardiac output syndrome (defined as: dopamine, i.v. infusion with dosage >5 mcg/(kg min), enoximone, i.v. infusion with dosage >5 mcg/(kg min), during more than 24 postoperative hours). This group of patients is the object of our study. The majority of them (57; in-hospital mortality 12/57: 21%) were in group B, whereas 13 patients in group A (in-hospital mortality 1/13: 7.7%). Thirteen patients died perioperatively and eight of them underwent postmortem examination.
| 3. Methods |
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The following tests were used to detect potential myocardial injury:
For each patient, we considered only the highest Tn-I value. Cardiac function was evaluated by physical examination, ECG, and echocardiogram. Echocardiographic follow-up was performed before discharge, at 3, 6, 12 months after the procedure or whenever required by the clinical situation, in our outpatient clinic.
Duration of CPB, aortic cross-clamping time, circulatory arrest time, were prospectively collected (Table 1 ). All the procedures were performed with the aid of moderate hypothermic CPB. Diastolic cardiac arrest was achieved by an antegrade infusion of hematic cardioplegic solution. Both in neonates and older patients, cardioplegic aortic root infusion was repeated at 2030 min. When performing circulatory arrest, the core temperature was lowered to 18 °C, adjusting the hematocrit to 18% in the cooling phase and 30% during re-warming. All the patients were transferred to ICU for postoperative care.
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For each patient, survival free from cardiac events was considered from the hospital discharge to the occurrence of the first cardiac event, or to the end of the study.
Tn-I concentrations were determined by a fluorometric enzyme immunoassay analyzer (Stratus CS, Dade Behring) with a functional sensitivity of 0.03 µg/l; the cutoff level was 0.08 ng/ml.
3.1 Statistical analysis
The prevalence of risk factors (age, cardiac defect) and the cumulative incidence of perioperative, in-hospital and early and long-term follow-up cardiac complications (CPB time, cross-clamping time, circulatory arrest, ICU stay, Tn-I, CK-MB, and EF at echocardiogram), for the two groups, were compared with the Fisher's exact test for categorical variables and t-test for continuous variables.
Results are reported as mean ± standard deviation in text and tables. Statistical significance was defined as a p-value less than 0.05.
| 4. Results |
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Tn-I was higher than 35 µg/l in 19 patients (27%; median age 2.76 months), while it was lower in the remaining 51 patients, within the range of 2034 µg/l in 19, between 10 and 19 µg/l in 20, and 19 µg/l in 10; only two patients (0.3%) had a postoperative Tn-I value lower than 1 µg/l.
Among those with a Tn-I >35 µg/l (high-risk group, 19 patients), we observed 9 deaths (47%). Mean value of Tn-I observed in these patients who died was 163 ± 186 µg/l (median Tn-I 91 µg/l; range 55548.2 µg/l) (CK-MB 258.75 ± 248.19 µg/l). Among survivors (10 patients), Tn-I mean value was 73.4 ± 37 µg/l (median value 67 µg/l; range 35150 µg/l) (CK-MB 68.18 ± 39.34 µg/l) (p = 0.16).
Among those with a Tn-I <35 µg/l (low-risk group), 4 died (4/52: 7.7%). Median Tn-I was 22 µg/l (range between 15 and 32 µg/l) (CK-MB 28.84 ± 11.58 µg/l).
4.2 Operative data
The high-risk group had a significantly longer CPB time than the low-risk group (272 ± 164 min vs 150 ± 67 min; p
= 0.001). The patients who died had a mean CPB time and ICU stay significantly longer than survivors (p
0.05), while mean cross-clamping time was comparable (93 ± 40 min vs 68 ± 26 min; p
= 0.45).
Circulatory arrest was employed in 26 patients. Among these, 4 patients died (15.4%: median arrest time of 26.5 min, range 591 min). In the 22 survivors, the median arrest time was 28.5 min, ranging 365 min (p = 0.76).
4.3 Autopsy
The postmortem examination was performed in the majority of dead patients (8/13: 61%). Massive myocardial damage was observed in seven autopsies with areas of focal myocardial hemorrhage in four cases; lung infarction with sign of multiorgan failure was observed in the remaining case (Table 3
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Among the high-risk group, echocardiography showed severe cardiac failure (ejection fraction lower than 20%) in the nine deceased patients. In survivors, mean postoperative ejection fraction was estimated to be 35.7 ± 8.5%. In the long-term, ventricular function improved to normality with normalization of ejection fraction in all patients. Despite a postoperative Tn-I >100 µg/l, two patients, showing a severely depressed cardiac function in ICU and at discharge, at 12 months control, presented with a left ventricle ejection fraction within normal limits (LVEF 5070%).
Among the low-risk group, 2 out of 4 dead patients showed a very low ejection fraction (30%). However, the long-term bidimensional echocardiography showed improvement (mean ejection fraction 71.6 ± 8.9%) in all but three patients, in whom LVEF at discharge was higher than 50%. There was no late death at follow-up.
All patients with a postoperative Tn-I value greater than 20 µg/l showed a significantly better cardiac performance in the long term, while in patients with a postoperative peak value lower than 20 µg/l, in-hospital cardiac function was comparable to that observed at follow-up (Table 4).
| 5. Discussion |
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As previously reported [1,8,10,11], Tn-I plasma concentration is a specific marker of myocardial injury. Tn-I detects either presence or persistence of myocardial injury after cardiac surgery, and is able to discriminate between patients at higher risk of developing a clinically relevant cardiac failure from those with a good clinical outcome. A trend toward higher Tn-I value has been already observed in patients undergoing surgery for congenital cardiac defects, especially when the repair is undertaken in infancy and when cardiopulmonary by-pass is longer than 100 min [6,1012]. As expected, analysis of our data shows a close relationship between complexity of the operation and length of CPB, and Tn-I serum level.
Immer et al. [8] have classified the patients undergoing cardiac surgery for congenital heart defects into two different risk groups: those at low risk, in whom Tn-I value was lower than 35 µg/l, and those at high risk in whom Tn-I was higher than 35 µg/l. In their series of 54 children who underwent surgery for ASD and VSD closure (equivalent to our group A), and 19 who underwent repair for tetralogy of Fallot or double outlet right ventricle (equivalent to our group B), only 2 children died among the 19 patients with a postoperative Tn-I value higher than 35 µg/l. Both patients showed a Tn-I serum level above 100 µg/l (126 and 319 µg/l, respectively). This supports the findings reported by Taggart et al. [6] and Kirklin et al. [13], who considered Tn-I values higher than 100 µg/l as lethal. In our experience, among the six patients with a Tn-I exceeding 100 µg/l, mortality was four (66%). Survivors had a Tn-I level between 124 and 150 µg/l. Twelve months of echocardiographic evaluation showed a complete cardiac function recovery in both of them.
In our study group left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly worse in patients with Tn-I > 35 µg/l, versus those with Tn-I <35 µg/l. Moreover, concerning the patients with a postoperative peak Tn-I value <35 µg/l, only the patients in whom the Tn-I was within 1 and 9 µg/l (Tn-I) had a significantly better cardiac function, while for those with Tn-I >10 µg/l cardiac function was worse.
However, all survivors with a postoperative Tn-I value higher than 20 µg/l showed a significant improvement of cardiac performance at echocardiographic follow-up. On the contrary, although improved, cardiac function was comparable to that observed in the postoperative period in patients with Tn-I values lower than 20 µg/l.
It has long been believed that adult cardiomyocytes do not proliferate after birth, thus the myocardium in the necrotic area should be gradually replaced by collagen tissue resulting in cardiac dysfunction. Recently, Anversa and Kajstura [14] and Beltrami et al. [15] showed that adult cardiomyocytes could enter the cell cycle and increase the cell number, and that undifferentiated stem cells in the bone marrow may be transported to the heart differentiating into cardiomyocytes and vascular endothelial cells in a murine model [16]; similar finding has also been observed by Laflamme et al. [17]. Quaini et al. [18] showed that circulating stem cells can contribute to the re-population of solid-organ by observing a male chimerism in heart allografts from female donors, thus probably contributing to ventricular remodeling. The observation that circulating blood cells might colonize solid-organ tissues suggests that tissue regeneration and repair of injured or diseased areas are feasible [19]. According to our clinical experience, we can speculate that cardiac remodeling might also appear after a devastating myocardial damage (Tn-I value >100 µg/l). This appealing hypothesis may explain why patients with Tn-I >35 µg/l and cardiac dysfunction at discharge, showed a complete recovery at 12 months follow-up. However, mean Tn-I value in survivors was lower than that observed in children who died (25 µg/l vs 130 µg/l), confirming therefore the relationship between Tn-I and cardiac failure during in-hospital stay. Thus, as reported by other authors [69], also in our experience, Tn-I played an important role as a monitor of perioperative myocardial cell damage being an additional prognostic risk. In light of these results, we believe that a routine evaluation of postoperative Tn-I levels may be useful for safe clinical management, so as to identify high-risk patients, and optimize postoperative care.
As far as CPB time is concerned, Immer et al. [8] identified a significant correlation between peak Tn-I value and cardiopulmonary by-pass time. The longer the CPB time (>100 min), the higher the mortality risk; and the longer the ischemic time, the higher the Tn-I levels [6,8]. Our results also support these previous findings. Tn-I levels were in fact significantly higher in those patients in whom CPB time was longer. We believe that a cutoff time for CPB should be raised to 140 min, being our mean CPB time of 139 min, in low-risk patients (Tn-I <35 µg/l). Thus, although we think that a routine evaluation of the postoperative Tn-I in pediatric cardiac surgery is useful, we speculate that it is mandatory when CPB time is longer than 140 min.
Study limitations of this study are as follows:
However, in this study we believe results are significant because we have included a large population of patients who had undergone surgery for several different CHD, either simple or complex lesions.
| 6. Conclusion |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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