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    December, 2002

 

 


Advanced Fetal
Care Center

On the Web
Phone: 617.355.3869
PTh(or) 866.FETAL-CARE


February, 2003
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Children's fetal cardiac center
Fetal intervention established as viable treatment for defects


Figure 1
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Children’s cardiologists and fetal care specialists performed the first fetal cardiac intervention for a hypoplastic left heart patient with an intact atrial septum. Doctors created an atrial septal defect (fig. 1) to open bloodflow within the heart (fig. 2), improving the infant’s outlook.


Figure 2
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Children’s Hospital Boston has been a leader in pediatric cardiac care since 1938, when Robert Gross, MD, performed the world’s first successful surgical repair of a congenital cardiovascular defect, a patent ductus arteriosus. Today, that tradition is upheld by Children’s cardiologists, led by Cardiologist-in-Chief Jim Lock, MD, and clinicians from the Advanced Fetal Care Center (AFCC), led by pediatric and fetal surgeon Rusty Jennings, MD. Over the last 18 months, these teams have established fetal cardiac intervention as a viable treatment for fetuses with life-threatening cardiac defects.

In Sept. 2001, Children’s interventional cardiologists, echocardiographers and fetal surgeons teamed with high-risk obstetricians and fetal ultrasonographers from Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) to perform the world’s first successful intervention in a fetus with critical aortic stenosis and early signs of left ventricular hypoplasia.

Based on experience with other fetuses, all indications were that the baby, now named Jack, would go on to develop full blown hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS). At 23 weeks, Jack’s mother underwent a percutaneous procedure in which Jack’s severely narrowed aortic valve was opened with a balloon catheter.

The needle that delivered the catheter was introduced through the mother’s abdomen and into her uterus, and was then slipped between Jack’s ribs and into his heart. The 3-mm balloon was inflated, increasing blood flow through the valve and enabling the ventricle to develop and grow. Ten weeks later when Jack was born, he required no additional cardiac intervention, although according to echocardiographer Wayne Tworetzky, MD, who follows Jack in the cardiology clinic, Jack may require another aortic valve dilation when he gets older.

Since March 2000, Children’s has performed 12 fetal cardiac catheterizations to address a number of serious congenital heart defects, including aortic valve stenosis and atresia, pulmonary valve atresia with hypoplastic right heart syndrome, and HLHS with an intact atrial septum. These advances complement Children’s rapidly growing Advanced Fetal Care Center, one of only four comprehensive fetal care centers in the United States and the only one in New England.

The AFCC brings together specialists in fetal surgery, fetal imaging and diagnosis, neonatal care, genetics, anesthesiology, cardiology and cardiovascular surgery, otolaryngology, urology, and neurology to provide services ranging from state-of-the-art fetal diagnosis to fetal catheter interventions to fetal surgery and exit-to-ECMO procedures.

In the fetal cardiac procedures performed to date, Children’s has partnered with neighboring BWH, where a high-risk obstetrical team headed by Louise Wilkins-Haug, MD, director of Maternal and Fetal Medicine, manages the mother’s care. During the fetal procedures Dr. Wilkins-Haug’s role as the obstetrician includes rotating the fetus into position—either by massaging the mother’s abdomen or massaging the uterus directly—so that Children’s cardiologists can access the tiny target in the fetus’s heart. Under the guidance of Carol Benson, MD, a specialist in obstetrical ultrasound, Dr. Wilkins-Huag then places the needle through the uterus and into the fetus’s chest and heart, where Children’s cardiologists take over.

In Sept. 2002, Dr. Lock and the team performed a fetal cardiac catheterization to create an atrial septal defect (ASD) in a 31-week fetus with HLHS (figures 1 and 2). While HLHS diagnosis carries a mortality risk below 15 percent at Children’s, babies born with HLHS and an intact septum—where there is no route for pulmonary venous return to leave the left atrium—are at the highest risk, with a survival rate around 40 percent. At 31 weeks, the development of the baby’s heart was too adced for cardiologists to improve left ventricular size, but Lock and Mary van der Velde, MD, director of the Fetal Echocardiography Program, believed an ASD would improve the baby’s lung development during his remaining weeks in utero, making him less cyanotic at birth and improving his long term outcome.

The baby, now named Jacob, was stable when he was born at 39 weeks and underwent a Norwood procedure at 2 days of age. His surgery and recovery were uneventful, and his family returned to their home outside Philadelphia just days later with their healthy baby.

 


Related links:


Advanced Fetal Care Center
Operation on Fetus's Heart Valve Called a 'Science Fiction' Success
-- The New York Times
Children's team pioneers new cardiac procedure
-- Children's News