Title: Tal Geva, MD
1Food and Drug Administration Pediatric Advisory
Subcommittee Meeting February 3, 2004
Overview of Progress in Pediatric Cardiology
Tal Geva, MD Department of Cardiology Childrens
Hospital Boston
2Outline
- Scope of congenital heart disease (CHD)
- Trends in CHD outcomes
- Trends in management
- Trends in imaging of pediatric and adult CHD
- Gaps in knowledge
Tal Geva 2/04
3Scope of Congenital Heart Disease
- AHA 8 per 1,000 live births (40,000/year),
106 Americans currently living with CHD - Hoffman and Kaplan (review of 62 studies
published since 1955) - 4 to 50 per 1,000 live births
- Incidence depends primarily on number of
small VSDs included in series - Moderate and severe CHD 6 per 1,000 without
BAV and 19 per 1,000 with BAV
www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier
1477 JACC 2002391890-900
Tal Geva 2/04
4Types of Congenital Heart Disease (median
incidence per 106 live births excluding
non-stenotic BAV and silent PDA)
Excluding tiny VSDs
Source JACC 2002391890-900
Tal Geva 2/04
5Outcomes of CHD Mortality
- 1995-97 CHD contributed to 5822 deaths/year
Source Boneva et al. (CDC) Circulation
20011032376-81
Tal Geva 2/04
6Outcomes of CHD Mortality
- 51 of deaths in infants 7 in 1-4 years
- 19 higher mortality in blacks compared with
whites
Source Boneva et al. (CDC) Circulation
20011032376-81
Tal Geva 2/04
7Childrens Hospital Boston CICU Mortality
Tal Geva 2/04
8Despite an overall ? in mortality, some pockets
of resistance persist
Source Sadr et al. Am J Cardiol 200086577-9
Tal Geva 2/04
9Outcomes of CHD Morbidity
- The majority of therapeutic interventions for CHD
do not lead to cure - Residual anatomic abnormalities
- Residual hemodynamic abnormalities
- Neurodevelopmental abnormalities
- Social and insurability issues
Tal Geva 2/04
10As survival of patients with CHD improved,
attention shifted from getting patients out of
the hospital to improving their functional,
psychological, and social outcomes
Tal Geva 2/04
11Neurodevelopmental Outcomes
D-TGA
Circulatory arrest v. low-flow CPB trial Wypij et
al. J Thorac Cardiovsc Surg 20031261397
Tal Geva 2/04
12Neurodevelopmental Outcomes
S/p Fontan
Source Goldberg et al. J Ped 2000137646
Tal Geva 2/04
13Neurodevelopmental Outcomes
Tal Geva 2/04
14Dunbar-Masterson et al. Circulation 20011041138
Tal Geva 2/04
15Outcomes of CHD Morbidity
- Residual anatomic abnormalities
- Residual hemodynamic abnormalities
- Neurodevelopmental abnormalities
- Social and insurability issues
Tal Geva 2/04
16Even when we think treatment leads to cure
22 year-old woman, s/p coarctation repair in
infancy
Tal Geva 2/04
17Residual hemodynamic burden is common
S/p TOF repair
Tal Geva 2/04
18Trends in Management of CHD
Tal Geva 2/04
19- Many variables account for the dramatic progress
in outcomes of CHD - Better understanding of anatomy, embryology,
genetics, pathophysiology, and natural history - Improved diagnosis
- Support technology (e.g., cardiorespiratory
support and monitoring technology in the OR
and CICU, ECMO, mechanical assist devices) - Pharmacotherapy (e.g., pressors, ACE
inhibitors, ?-blockers, NO, Sildenofil,
Bosentan) - Surgical techniques
- Transcatheter therapy
Tal Geva 2/04
20- Many variables account for the dramatic progress
in outcomes of CHD - Better understanding of anatomy, embryology,
genetics, pathophysiology, natural history - Improved diagnosis
- Support technology (e.g., cardiorespiratory
support and monitoring technology in the OR
and CICU, ECMO, mechanical assist devices) - Pharmacotherapy (e.g., pressors, ACE
inhibitors, ?-blockers, NO, Sildenofil,
Bosentan) - Surgical techniques
- Transcatheter therapy
Tal Geva 2/04
21Trends in Surgical Management of CHD
Staged palliative approach with emphasis on
Rx. of symptoms
Early anatomic repair with emphasis on
restoration of normal physiology
- Improved protection of vital organs
- Circulatory arrest v. low-flow bypass
- Improved myocardial protection
- Improved O2 delivery pH stat v. ? stat
- Minimally invasive surgery
- Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery
- Robotic surgery
Tal Geva 2/04
22Coarctation repair by robotic surgery
Tal Geva 2/04
23- Many variables account for the dramatic progress
in outcomes of CHD - Better understanding of anatomy, embryology,
genetics, pathophysiology, natural history - Improved diagnosis
- Support technology (e.g., cardiorespiratory
support and monitoring technology in the OR
and CICU, ECMO, mechanical assist devices) - Pharmacotherapy (e.g., pressors, ACE
inhibitors, ? blockers, NO, Sildenofil,
Bosentan) - Surgical techniques
- Transcatheter therapy
Tal Geva 2/04
24Transcatheter Management of CHD
- Valve and vessel stenosis
- balloon dilation
- stents
- radiofrequency energy
- Occlusion procedures
- ASD, VSD, PDA, collaterals, fistulae
- variety of occluding devices and coils
- Arrhythmia therapy (ablation)
Tal Geva 2/04
25Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Annual Case
Volume
Tal Geva 2/04
26- Many variables account for the dramatic progress
in outcomes of CHD - Better understanding of anatomy, embryology,
genetics, pathophysiology, natural history - Improved diagnosis
- Support technology (e.g., cardiorespiratory
support and monitoring technology in the OR
and CICU, ECMO, mechanical assist devices) - Pharmacotherapy (e.g., pressors, ACE
inhibitors, ? blockers, NO, Sildenofil,
Bosentan) - Surgical techniques
- Transcatheter therapy
Tal Geva 2/04
27Evolution of CHD Imaging
Cath X-rays
Diagnostic
Interventional
Nuclear Radioactive tracers
SPECT
99mTc
PET
Thallium
Radium
2D
Color
3D TDI
B?M-mode
Echo Ultrasound
CT X-rays
5 min/slice
400 msec/slice
MRI Magnetic fields and RF
Anatomy
Function
Tal Geva 2/04
28Imaging Procedures Childrens Hospital Boston,
2003
Tal Geva 2/04
29The excellent overall survival of patients with
CHD and the associated high rate of residual
anatomic and functional cardiovascular
impairments result in a rapidly growing
population of individuals with a life-long need
for surveillance that includes cardiac imaging
Tal Geva 2/04
30Echocardiography Laboratory Annual Case Volume
Tal Geva 2/04
31Cardiovascular MRI Program Annual Case Volume
Tal Geva 2/04
32Safety Issues in Pediatric Cardiac Imaging
- Sedation
- Inherent risks of invasive dx. procedures
- Ionizing radiation exposure
- Contrast agents
- Radiopharmaceuticals
- Auditory trauma
- Pharmacological testing
- Improper use of imaging technology, including
an unfavorable risk/benefit ratio
Tal Geva 2/04
33Safety Issues in Pediatric Cardiac Imaging
- Sedation
- Inherent risks of invasive dx. procedures
- Ionizing radiation exposure (cath, CT)
- Contrast agents (cath, echo, CT, MRI)
- Radiopharmaceuticals (nuclear medicine)
- Auditory trauma (MRI)
- Pharmacological testing (cath, echo, MRI,
nuclear) - Proper use of imaging technology, including a
favorable risk/benefit ratio
Tal Geva 2/04
34Tal Geva 2/04
35Estimated Lifetime Attributable Risk of Fatal
Cancer in Pediatric CT
Risk
Age at CT Examination
Source Brenner. Pediatr Radiol 2002 32 228
Tal Geva 2/04
36Brenner et al, 2003
- Above doses of 50-100mSv (protracted exposure)
or 10-50 mSv (acute exposure), direct
epidemiologic evidence from human populations
demonstrate the exposure to ionizing radiation
increases the risk of some cancer.
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.2235592100
Tal Geva 2/04
37Cancer Following Cardiac Cath in Childhood Modan
et al. Int J of Epidemiology 200229424
- 674 children cath between 1950-1970
- 28.6 had gt1 cath mean age at cath 8.96
- Mean age at f/u 37.5 years
- Expected number of malignancies 4.75
- Observed number of malignancies 11.0
- Standardized incidence ratio 2.3
- (95 CI 1.2-4.1)
- Of the 11 malignancies, 4 were lymphomas and 3
were melanomas
Tal Geva 2/04
38Summary
- Advances in diagnosis and management of CHD
have led to a dramatic decline in mortality
(lt3) - Rapidly expanding population of patients with
CHD (currently 1-2 million and growing) - Patients rarely cured frequent anatomic and
hemodynamic abnormalities requiring
surveillance (e.g., imaging) - ? use of transcatheter and minimally-invasive
surgical interventions that rely on
image-guidance
Tal Geva 2/04
39Summary
- Consequently, the number of cardiovascular
imaging procedures in patients with CHD will
continue to increase - Urgent need for research in pediatric cardiac
imaging - safety and efficacy of radiopharmaceuticals
- cost-risk/benefit analysis of imaging
strategies - minimizing exposure to ionizing radiation
Tal Geva 2/04
40Thank You
Tal Geva 2/04
41Nuclear Studies at CHB in 2003 N 515
Shunt and EF (n 3 0.5)
Myocardial perfusion (n 92 17.9)
Lung perfusion (n 420 82)
Tal Geva 2/04
42Childrens Hospital Boston 2003
43Tal Geva 2/04