Background: Prenatal diagnosis (PND) of aortic coarctation (AoCo) has been associated with a significant improvement in early results, but there is limited information on the long-term cardiovascular outcome.
Methods: We studied 103 patients with simple AoCo, operated in the neonatal period, with a median follow-up of 8,5 years (2 to 23,7 years), with 47% followed for over 10 years. PND was made in 35%. The primary aim was to determine the short and long-term cardiovascular impact of PND of AoCo.
Results: Neonates with PND had less preoperative neonatal complications, with only 2,8% incidence of a composite preoperative severe morbidity course, compared to 28% in the postnatal group. PND patients underwent surgery 8 days earlier and had a shorter length of stay in ICU. PND did not impact the incidence of post-operative complications. On the long-term, prevalence of hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy and rate of recoarctation were not influenced by PND. The PND group had mean 24 h diastolic BP 9 mmHg lower and mean daytime diastolic BP 11 mmHg lower. In the final multivariable model, PND was the single independent variable correlating with daytime diastolic BP.
Conclusion: PND of AoCo effectively leads to a better pre-operative course with less pre-operative morbidity. We found no significant differences in immediate post-operative cardiovascular outcomes. A better initial course of patients with PND does not have a major long-term impact on cardiovascular outcomes, nevertheless, at late follow-up PND patients had lower diastolic BP values on ambulatory monitoring, which may have an impact on long-term cardiovascular risk.
Keywords: Aortic Coarctation; Cardiovascular outcomes; Long-term follow-up; Prenatal diagnosis.
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