Comparison of Shunt Types in the Norwood Procedure for Single-Ventricle Lesions

Richard G. Ohye(Duke University), Lynn A. Sleeper(Duke University), Lynn Mahony(Duke University), Jane W. Newburger(Duke University), Gail D. Pearson(Duke University), Minmin Lü(Duke University), Caren S. Goldberg(Duke University), Sarah Tabbutt(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Peter C. Frommelt(Children's Hospital of Wisconsin), Nancy S. Ghanayem(Children's Hospital of Wisconsin), Peter C. Laussen(Duke University), John F. Rhodes(Wake Forest University), Alan B. Lewis(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Seema Mital(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Chitra Ravishankar(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Ismée A. Williams, Carolyn Dunbar‐Masterson(Duke University), Andrew M. Atz(Medical University of South Carolina), Steven D. Colan(Duke University), L. LuAnn Minich(Primary Children's Hospital), Christian Pizarro(DuPont (United States)), Kirk R. Kanter(Emory University), James Jaggers(Wake Forest University), Jeffrey P. Jacobs, Catherine D. Krawczeski(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Nancy A. Pike(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Brian W. McCrindle(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Lisa Virzi(Duke University), J. William Gaynor(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia)
New England Journal of Medicine
May 26, 2010
Cited by 912Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Norwood procedure with a modified Blalock-Taussig (MBT) shunt, the first palliative stage for single-ventricle lesions with systemic outflow obstruction, is associated with high mortality. The right ventricle-pulmonary artery (RVPA) shunt may improve coronary flow but requires a ventriculotomy. We compared the two shunts in infants with hypoplastic heart syndrome or related anomalies. METHODS: Infants undergoing the Norwood procedure were randomly assigned to the MBT shunt (275 infants) or the RVPA shunt (274 infants) at 15 North American centers. The primary outcome was death or cardiac transplantation 12 months after randomization. Secondary outcomes included unintended cardiovascular interventions and right ventricular size and function at 14 months and transplantation-free survival until the last subject reached 14 months of age. RESULTS: Transplantation-free survival 12 months after randomization was higher with the RVPA shunt than with the MBT shunt (74% vs. 64%, P=0.01). However, the RVPA shunt group had more unintended interventions (P=0.003) and complications (P=0.002). Right ventricular size and function at the age of 14 months and the rate of nonfatal serious adverse events at the age of 12 months were similar in the two groups. Data collected over a mean (+/-SD) follow-up period of 32+/-11 months showed a nonsignificant difference in transplantation-free survival between the two groups (P=0.06). On nonproportional-hazards analysis, the size of the treatment effect differed before and after 12 months (P=0.02). CONCLUSIONS: In children undergoing the Norwood procedure, transplantation-free survival at 12 months was better with the RVPA shunt than with the MBT shunt. After 12 months, available data showed no significant difference in transplantation-free survival between the two groups. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00115934.)


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