• Curr Cardiol Rev · May 2011

    Review

    Mechanical circulatory support for end-stage heart failure in repaired and palliated congenital heart disease.

    • Joseph B Clark, Linda B Pauliks, John L Myers, and Akif Undar.
    • Penn State Hershey Pediatric Cardiovascular Research Center, Departments of Pediatrics, Penn State Hershey Childrens Hospital, Penn State Hershey College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033, USA.
    • Curr Cardiol Rev. 2011 May 1; 7 (2): 102-9.

    AbstractApproximately one in one hundred children is born with congenital heart disease. Most can be managed with corrective or palliative surgery but a small group will develop severe heart failure, leaving cardiac transplantation as the ultimate treatment option. Unfortunately, due to the inadequate number of available donor organs, only a small number of patients can benefit from this therapy, and mortality remains high for pediatric patients awaiting heart transplantation, especially compared to adults. The purpose of this review is to describe the potential role of mechanical circulatory support in this context and to review current experience. For patients with congenital heart disease, ventricular assist devices are most commonly used as a bridge to cardiac transplantation, an application which has been shown to have several important advantages over medical therapy alone or support with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, including improved survival to transplant, less exposure to blood products with less immune sensitization, and improved organ function. While these devices may improve wait list mortality, the chronic shortage of donor organs for children is likely to remain a problem into the foreseeable future. Therefore, there is great interest in the development of mechanical ventricular assist devices as potential destination therapy for congenital heart disease patients with end-stage heart failure. This review first discusses the experience with the currently available ventricular assist devices in children with congenital heart disease, and then follows to discuss what devices are under development and may reach the bedside soon.

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