학술논문

Multi‐Institutional Practice‐Patterns in Fetal Congenital Heart Disease Following Implementation of a Standardized Clinical Assessment and Management Plan
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of the American Heart Association. 10(15)
Subject
Clinical Research
Cardiovascular
Prevention
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
Pediatric
Heart Disease
Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods
Reproductive health and childbirth
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
California
Cesarean Section
Delivery
Obstetric
Female
Gestational Age
Heart Defects
Congenital
Humans
Infant
Newborn
Maternal Age
Patient Care Planning
Practice Patterns
Physicians'
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Outcome
Prenatal Care
Prenatal Diagnosis
Quality Improvement
Risk Adjustment
cesarean
fetal CHD
obstetrics
prenatal congenital heart disease
SCAMP
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Language
Abstract
Background Prenatal diagnosis of congenital heart disease has been associated with early-term delivery and cesarean delivery (CD). We implemented a multi-institutional standardized clinical assessment and management plan (SCAMP) through the University of California Fetal-Maternal Consortium. Our objective was to decrease early-term (37-39 weeks) delivery and CD in pregnancies complicated by fetal congenital heart disease using a SCAMP methodology to improve practice in a high-risk and clinically complex setting. Methods and Results University of California Fetal-Maternal Consortium site-specific management decisions were queried following SCAMP implementation. This contemporary intervention group was compared with a University of California Fetal-Maternal Consortium historical cohort. Primary outcomes were early-term delivery and CD. A total of 496 maternal-fetal dyads with prenatally diagnosed congenital heart disease were identified, 185 and 311 in the historical and intervention cohorts, respectively. Recommendation for later delivery resulted in a later gestational age at delivery (38.9 versus 38.1 weeks, P=0.01). After adjusting for maternal age and site, historical controls were more likely to have a CD (odds ratio [OR],1.8; 95% CI, 2.1-2.8; P=0.004) and more likely (OR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.4-3.3) to have an early-term delivery than the intervention group. Vaginal delivery was recommended in 77% of the cohort, resulting in 61% vaginal deliveries versus 50% in the control cohort (P=0.03). Among pregnancies with major cardiac lesions (n=373), vaginal birth increased from 51% to 64% (P=0.008) and deliveries ≥39 weeks increased from 33% to 48% (P=0.004). Conclusions Implementation of a SCAMP decreased the rate of early-term deliveries and CD for prenatal congenital heart disease. Development of clinical pathways may help standardize care, decrease maternal risk secondary to CD, improve neonatal outcomes, and reduce healthcare costs.