In this large U.S. cohort, long-term mortality after congenital heart surgery was elevated across all forms of CHD. Survival has improved over time, particularly for severe defects with significant changes in their management strategy, but still lags behind the general population.
Background
Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is an uncommon, potentially lethal, ion channelopathy. Standard therapies have high failure rates and little is known about treatment in children. Newer options such as flecainide and left cardiac sympathetic denervation (LCSD) are not well validated. We sought to define treatment outcomes in children with CPVT.
Methods and Results
This is a Pediatric and Congenital Electrophysiology Society (PACES) multicenter, retrospective cohort study of CPVT patients diagnosed before 19 years of age. The cohort included 226 patients, including 170 probands and 56 relatives. Symptomatic presentation was reported in 176 (78%). Symptom onset occurred at 10.8 (IQR 6.8–13.2) years with a delay to diagnosis of 0.5 (0–2.6) years. Syncope (p<0.001), cardiac arrest (p<0.001) and treatment failure (p=0.008) occurred more often in probands. Beta-blockers were prescribed in 205 of 211 patients (97%) on medication, and 25% experienced at least one treatment failure event. Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) were placed in 121 (54%) and was associated with electrical storm in 22 (18%). Flecainide was used in 24% and LCSD in 8%. Six deaths (3%) occurred during a cumulative follow-up of 788 patient-years.
Conclusions
This study demonstrates a malignant phenotype and lengthy delay to diagnosis in CPVT. Probands were typically severely affected. Beta-blockers were almost universally initiated; however, treatment failure, non-compliance and sub-therapeutic dosing were often reported. ICDs were common despite numerous device-related complications. Treatment failure was rare in the quarter of patients on flecainide. LCSD was not uncommon although the indication was variable.
This large, multicentre study identifies contemporary challenges related to the diagnosis and prognostication of CPVT patients. Structural modelling of RyR2 can improve our understanding severe CPVT phenotypes. Wakeful rest, rather than exertion, often precipitated life-threatening cardiac events.
NKG2D serves as one of the most potent activating receptors for effector lymphocytes in peripheral tissues. Here we report the characterization of Letal, the first human transmembrane NKG2D ligand lacking an immunoglobulin-like α-3 ectodomain. Letal is constitutively expressed by a variety of normal tissues, and is up-regulated in tumor cells of different origins. Unlike other NKG2D ligands, Letal mRNA expression progressively decreased after treatment of tumor cells with retinoic acid. Simultaneous T-cell receptor activation and engagement of Letal stimulated proliferation of CD8 + cells and dramatically increased IL-2 and IFNγ secretion. In addition, Letal induced the killing of cancer cells by CD8 + and NK cells. These results suggest that Letal delivers activating signals to NK cells and promotes tumor immune surveillance by inducing the expansion of anti-tumor cytotoxic lymphocytes.
Mortality after pediatric cardiac surgery varies among centers. Previous research suggests that surgical volume is an important predictor of this variation. This report characterizes the relative contribution of patient factors, center surgical volume, and a volume-independent center effect on early postoperative mortality in a retrospective cohort study of North American centers in the Pediatric Cardiac Care Consortium (up to 500 cases/center/year). From 1982 to 2007, 49 centers reported 109,475 operations, 85,023 of which were analyzed using hierarchical multivariate logistic regression analysis. Patient characteristics varied significantly among the centers. The adjusted odds ratio (OR) for mortality decreased more than 10-fold during the study period (1982 vs. 2007: OR, 12.27, 95 % confidence interval [CI], 8.52–17.66; p < 0.0001). Surgical volume was associated inversely with odds of death (additional 100 cases/year: OR, 0.84; 95 % CI, 0.78–0.90; p < 0.0001). In the analysis of interactions, this effect was fairly consistent across age groups, risk categories (except the lowest), and time periods. However, a volume-independent center effect contributed substantially more to the risk model than did the volume. The Risk Adjusted Classification for Congenital Heart Surgery, version 1 (RACHS-1) risk category remains the strongest predictor of postoperative mortality through the 25-year study period. In conclusion, center-specific variation exists but is only partially explained by operative volume. Low-risk operations are safely performed at centers in all volume categories, whereas regionalization or other quality improvement strategies appear to be warranted for moderate- and high-risk operations. Potentially preventable mortality occurs at centers in all volume categories studied, so referral or regionalization strategies must target centers by observed outcomes rather than assume that volume predicts quality.
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