New insights but new questions as well in repaired tetralogy of Fallot management
Last Updated: November 21, 2024
Given a plethora of new knowledge on right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) dysfunction in recent years, particularly in the area of new transcatheter device development, refinement in clinical decision-making as well as indications for pulmonary valve implantation, the present statement (1) by Geva et al is a welcome and timely addition. There is no disputing the burden of RVOT dysfunction anymore, be it post-tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) repair stenosis or pulmonary regurgitation (PR). As an aside, when I was in congenital heart surgery training 25 years ago, the morbidity of PR was widely disputed and often negated (2). In an era when transcatheter valve therapies had not been implemented yet, surgical pulmonary valve implantation (SPVR) was performed very rarely. In contrast, today, the long-term morbidity of chronic RVOT dysfunction is no longer contested, and SPVR is one of the most commonly performed congenital heart operations.
The present statement is comprehensive and well crafted. The overview of the available state-of-the-art device platform (both surgical and transcatheter) is excellent, and the focus on multi-disciplinary decision-making when deciding on which patients to intervene on cannot be overemphasized. Figure 2 in particular provides a logical framework around which clinicians can articulate their decision-making regarding PVR, both surgical and transcatheter.
There are still many areas in the long-term management of RVOT dysfunction in repaired TOF that remain unclear and could use data-driven decision making. One unanswered question will be whether the availability of midterm data on the recent self-expanding transcatheter pulmonary valve prostheses (designed expressly for patients with larger patched RVOTs) result in broadening of indications for PVR? Given the recent experience with transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) being increasingly utilized in younger and healthier patients, this seems likely.
On the surgical side, there is still uncertainty around which surgical prosthesis, pericardial or porcine prostheses, is best suited for the specific flow physiology of the right side of the heart, especially in the setting of the typically seen compensated RV chronic volume overload, increased end-diastolic pressures and decreased systolic function. In a recent propensity-matched study, we even found different outcomes not only between different valves, but also for valves implanted in native RVOTs as opposed to valves implanted in previously placed conduits (non-native outflow tracts). This strongly suggests that the local anatomic conditions, and even maybe the angle of valve placement have an important role to play (3). As a reminder, all of these prosthetic valves were developed for left-sided (aortic) implantation, and were never properly tested under right-sided conditions.
Another unknown is what type of prosthesis to use in a growing child, especially during the toddler to pre-teen period. This is not a very common occurrence, as PR is exceptionally well tolerated in children after TOF repair, but occasionally, a young patient might require a PVR due to out-of-norm RV dilation and/or dysfunction. Whether to use a conduit or a prosthetic valve in this setting is unclear. Finally, an ongoing controversy in surgical circles exists around the morbidity of a "standard" RVOT incision for primary TOF repair, as compared to the smaller RVOT incision used in the so-called transatrial-transpulmonary repair. The former requires a formal RVOT incision but very little to no muscle excision, while the latter requires either no RVOT incision or a minimal one, but much more extensive RVOT muscle bundles excision. Which one results in more RVOT dysfunction long term? Both camps have largely solidified their arguments and there is very little crossover. There is also no good available data to conclusively settle this question. And finally, as also noted in the manuscript, will the recent development towards living allogenic pulmonary valve transplantation result in a true "living" valve that grows with the patients and lasts longer than what we currently have? Time will tell.
Citation
Geva T, Wald RM, Bucholz E, Cnota JF, McElhinney DB, Mercer-Rosa LM, Mery CM, Miles AL, Moore J; on behalf of the American Heart Association Council on Lifelong Congenital Heart Disease and Heart Health in the Young; Council on Cardiovascular Surgery and Anesthesia; Council on Clinical Cardiology; and Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing. Long-term management of right ventricular outflow tract dysfunction in repaired tetralogy ofFallot: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Circulation. Published online November 21, 2024. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000001291
References
- Geva T et al Long-Term management of right ventricular outflow tract dysfunction in repaired tetralogy of Fallot. A scientific statement from the AHA
- Bacha E, Scheule AM, Zurakowski D, Mayer JE, del Nido PJ, Jonas RA. Long term results after early primary repair of tetralogy of Fallot. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 122:154-161; 2001
- Nguyen S.N., Vinogradsky A.V., Sevensky R., Crystal M.A, Bacha E.A, Goldstone A.B. Use of the Inspiris valve in the native right ventricular outflow tract is associated with early prosthetic regurgitation. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2023; 166: 1210-1221.e8
- Kalfa D, Rajab TK, Cordoves E, Emani S, Bacha E, Jaggers J, Goldstone A, Eghtesady P, Turek J. Living allogenic heart valve transplantation: Relative advantages and unanswered questions. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2024;167(5):1543-1546.
Science News Commentaries
-- The opinions expressed in this commentary are not necessarily those of the editors or of the American Heart Association --
Pub Date: Thursday, Nov 21, 2024
Author: Emile Bacha, MD, FACS
Affiliation: Roth Salzhauer Professor of Surgery and Chief Division of Cardiac, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery Columbia University Medical Center/NewYork-Presbyterian Co-Director, NYP Children's Heart Center Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital and Komansky Children’s/Cornell