LONG-TERM OUTCOME AFTER SURGICAL REPAIR OF ISOLATED ATRIAL SEPTAL-DEFECT - FOLLOW-UP AT 27 TO 32 YEARS

被引:515
作者
MURPHY, JG
GERSH, BJ
MCGOON, MD
MAIR, DD
PORTER, CJ
ILSTRUP, DM
MCGOON, DC
PUGA, FJ
KIRKLIN, JW
DANIELSON, GK
机构
[1] MAYO CLIN & MAYO FDN,DEPT CARDIOVASC DIS & INTERNAL MED,200 1ST ST SW,ROCHESTER,MN 55905
[2] MAYO CLIN & MAYO FDN,PEDIAT CARDIOL SECT,ROCHESTER,MN 55905
[3] MAYO CLIN & MAYO FDN,BIOSTAT SECT,ROCHESTER,MN 55905
[4] MAYO CLIN & MAYO FDN,DIV THORAC & CARDIOVASC SURG,ROCHESTER,MN 55905
[5] UNIV ALABAMA,MED CTR,DEPT SURG,BIRMINGHAM,AL 35294
关键词
D O I
10.1056/NEJM199012133232401
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Atrial septal defects have been surgically correctable for more than 30 years. The long-term survival rates among patients treated in the early era of cardiac surgery are poorly documented, but such data are of critical importance to the future medical care, employability, and insurability of these patients. To determine the natural history of surgically corrected atrial septal defects, we studied all 123 patients who underwent repair of an isolated defect (ostium secundum or sinus venosus) at the Mayo Clinic between 1956 and 1960, 27 to 32 years after the procedure. The follow-up status of all patients was determined by written questionnaires and telephone interviews. Hospital records and death certificates were obtained if interim hospitalization or death had occurred. The overall 30-year actuarial survival rate among survivors of the perioperative period was 74 percent, as compared with 85 percent among controls matched for age and sex. The perioperative mortality was 3.3 percent (four deaths). Actuarial 27-year survival rates among patients in the younger two quartiles according to age at operation (≤11 years and 12 to 24 years) were no different from rates among controls — 97 percent and 93 percent, respectively. In the two older quartiles (25 to 41 years and >41 years), 27-year survival rates were significantly less (P<0.001) — 84 percent and 40 percent, respectively — than in controls (91 and 59 percent). Independent predictors of long-term survival according to multivariate analysis were age at operation (P<0.0001) and systolic pressure in the main pulmonary artery before operation (P<0.0027). When repair was performed in older patients, late cardiac failure, stroke, and atrial fibrillation were significantly more frequent. Among patients with surgically repaired atrial septal defects, those operated on before the age of 25 have an excellent prognosis, but older patients require careful, regular supervision. (N Engl J Med 1990; 323: 1645–50.). © 1990, Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1645 / 1650
页数:6
相关论文
共 36 条