https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32980376/ Alagille syndrome
J Pediatr. 2020 Sep 24;S0022-3476(20)31245-2.
Outcomes in Patients with Alagille Syndrome and Complex Pulmonary Artery Disease
Roger Luong 1, Jeffrey A Feinstein 2, Michael Ma 3, Noelle H Ebel 2, Lisa Wise-Faberowski 4, Yulin Zhang 3, Lynn F Peng 2, Vamsi V Yarlagadda 2, Jennifer Shek 3, Frank L Hanley 3, Doff B McElhinney 5
PMID: 32980376
Abstract
Objective: To assess outcomes in a large cohort of patients with Alagille Syndrome (ALGS) who underwent pulmonary artery reconstruction surgery for complex PA disease.
Study eesign: Patients with ALGS who underwent PA reconstruction surgery at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford were reviewed. Patients were examined as an overall cohort and based on the primary cardiovascular diagnosis: severe isolated branch PA stenosis, tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) without major aortopulmonary collateral arteries (MAPCAs), or TOF with MAPCAs RESULTS: Fifty-one patients with ALGS underwent PA surgery at our center: 22 with severe branch PA stenosis, 9 with TOF without MAPCAs, and 20 with TOF and MAPCAs. Forty-one patients (80%) achieved a complete repair. Five of the patients with TOF with MAPCAs (25%) had a complete repair at the first surgery, compared with 8 (89%) and 19 (86%) with TOF without MAPCAs and isolated branch PA stenosis, respectively. At a median follow-up of 1.7 years after the first surgery, 39 patients (76%) were alive, 36 with a complete repair and a median PA:aortic systolic pressure ratio of 0.38. Nine patients (18%), 8 with isolated branch PA stenosis, underwent liver transplantation.
Conclusions: Most patients with ALGS and complex PA disease can undergo complete repair with low postoperative right ventricular pressure. Patients with TOF/MAPCAs had the worst outcome, with higher mortality and more frequent PA interventions compared with patients with TOF without MAPCAs or isolated branch PA stenosis. Complex PA disease is not a contraindication to liver transplantation in patients with ALGS.