Kids' heart repairs might not last lifetime
Problems emerge 20 years after surgery in some cases
WASHINGTON (AP) -- One of medicine's greatest
triumphs is hitting a snag: Up to 1 million people
born with once-lethal heart defects now have grown
up, a pioneering generation largely unaware that
heart repairs can wear out as they approach middle
age.
Few even get cardiac checkups, apparently believing
they were cured as children -- although a surgical
repair isn't a cure. Worse, few cardiologists
outside of children's hospitals have any idea how to
care for these special hearts.
"The disease as an adult is completely different
than the other kinds of heart disease adults get,"
warns Dr. Karen Kuehl, a pediatric cardiologist at
Children's National Medical Center in Washington,
who recently helped open one of the nation's few
specialty clinics for adults with congenital heart
disease.
"Here are people in their early young adulthood who
have thought that they went through this (childhood
surgery) ... and they were going to be fine. In
fact, we don't know that," Kuehl adds. "Now we're
seeing things nobody would have predicted."
Open-heart surgery for babies and young children
didn't become common until the 1970s. Before then,
only a quarter of "blue babies" and other infants
born with complex heart defects lived beyond a year.
Now, more than 95 percent of these "miracle babies"
will grow up, living near-normal lives for many
years.
Only recently have enough of the early survivors
reached adulthood for doctors to notice a disturbing
trend: Starting about 20 years after childhood
surgery, the risk for some serious problems --
irregular heartbeats, enlarged hearts, heart
failure, occasionally even sudden death -- begins to
rise among people who had complex defects repaired.
Caught early, many such problems are treatable or,
better, preventable. Too often, patients have
serious damage or even need a heart transplant by
the time someone links their survived birth defect
to the new illness, says Dr. Roberta Williams of the
American College of Cardiology.
How big is the risk, and who most needs preventive
care? Doctors don't yet know, although pregnancy
does demand extra caution. There have been no
large-scale studies of survivors' long-term health,
partly because so many disappear once they outgrow
the pediatric cardiologist. Less than half of adults
with congenital heart disease are thought to receive
any regular cardiac care.
Denial plays a role. Young adults who feel well, and
no longer are on a parent's insurance policy,
desperately want to be normal and may not see a need
for checkups.
Even if they want ongoing care, there are only about
100 cardiologists nationwide specially trained in
adult congenital heart disease. Considering one in
150 babies is born with a heart defect, a
soon-to-skyrocket new population of adult patients
will compete for limited specialists.
"There's a setup for people to fall between the
cracks," says Dr. George Ruiz of the Washington
Hospital Center, who with Kuehl runs the new
Washington Adult Congenital Heart Center -- and is
combing through boxes of dusty surgical records
dating to the '70s, hoping to track down now-grown
"miracle babies" who don't know their repairs may
not last for life.
There are new moves to help:
· Williams is co-writing new guidelines, due later
this year, on how to treat adult patients. The
advice is aimed both at cardiologists and at other
doctors, such as obstetricians, whose care decisions
may be complicated by heart abnormalities.
· Cardiologists and patient advocates are pushing
for funding for the National Institutes of Health to
open the first registry to track long-term health. A
registry could help uncover which of 35 different
cardiac defects are most likely to cause
late-in-life problems, determining who needs
specialty care and who will do fine with a general
physician's checkups.
"I don't mean to say we're going to die or do
poorly," stresses Amy Verstappen of the Adult
Congenital Heart Association, the advocacy group.
"But we are likely to need reoperations, likely to
develop things like heart arrhythmias where we're
going to need additional care. Better to get it
sooner than later."
For now, symptoms are what send many patients back
for heart care, but they can be subtle, easy to
dismiss.
Deepa Sinha of Herndon, Virginia, is a classic
example. She had a complex but common defect called
tetralogy of Fallot repaired at age 8, a final
checkup around 21, and "went on with my life." Then
weakness hit in her mid-30s.
Tetralogy repair frequently spurs a leak in the
pulmonary valve that over time damages the heart's
right ventricle, making it hard to exercise and
risking a fatal irregular heartbeat. Sinha didn't
know that. For a year she attributed worsening
fatigue to being out of shape and the demands of two
kids and a career -- until the day she couldn't lift
her 4-year-old.
"Life has totally changed," she says after getting a
new valve last year. "I should have gotten this done
years ago, if I had known."