Results of patients with PDA receiving surgical ligation—
Cases analyzed in different years and various kinds of hospital from the database of National Health Insurance
Yen-Hsiung Lin
ab, Li Lu
ac, Yu-Chuan Li
adGraduate Institute of Medical Informatics, Taipei Medical University
aDepartment of Pediatrics, Yu-Li Veterans Hospital
bVice Superintendent, Taipei Medical University Hospital
cVice Superintendent, Wan Fang Hospital
dyhs_lin@yahoo.com.tw
Abstract
The purpose of this report is to compare the results of surgical ligation of patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) in different years and various kinds of hospital.
The sources of data which are discussed and analyzed about surgical ligation of PDA are most from one or some medical centers up to now; however, these data cannot present the true event of a country. No any study about this issue, which source of data is from the database of National Health Insurance, which is a full data of medical record in a country or region and obtained via application for research, has been discussed and analyzed.
During a four-year period (1996~1999), 1708 patients receive surgical ligation of PDA from the database of National Health Insurance in Taiwan, 52 patients receive more than once of PDA ligation.
In this study, mean failure rate is 3.04%; the results also reveal that the annual failure rate and case numbers are declined year by year. It represents that our cardiovascular operative ability and neonatal intensive care level are advance gradually day by day.
Key words: surgical ligation, patent ductus arteriosus (PDA), failure rate, database of National Health Insurance
Introduction
Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is a heart defect that
occurs when the ductus arteriosus does not close at birth.
The ductus arteriosus is a temporary fetal blood vessel that connects the aorta and the pulmonary artery before birth. It should be present and open before birth when the fetus is developing in the uterus.
Since oxygen and nutrients are received from the placenta and the umbilical cord instead of the lungs, the ductus arteriosus allows blood to bypass the deflated lungs and go straight out to the body.
After birth, when the lungs need to add oxygen to the blood, the ductus arteriosus normally closes. The closure of the ductus arteriosus ensures that blood goes to the lungs to pick up oxygen before going out to the body.
Closure of the ductus arteriosus usually occurs at birth as levels of certain chemicals, called “prostaglandins”, change and the lungs fill with air. If the ductus arteriosus closes correctly, the blood pumped from the heart goes to the lungs, back into the heart, and then out to the body through the aorta. The blood returning from the lungs and moving out of the aorta carries oxygen to the cells of the body.
In some infants, the ductus arteriosus remains open and results in heart defect is known as PDA. In majority patients, a small PDA does not result in physical symptoms; however, if the PDA is huge, health complication problems may occur.
The patients with PDA present difficulty problems in
management especially combined with premature infants,
whether the treatment is medical or surgical.
The treatment and management of PDA depends on the size and symptoms being experienced by the affected individual. In some patients, a PDA can be corrected itself in the first months of life. In the majority of premature infants experiencing symptoms, the first step in correcting a PDA is prescribed prostaglandin inhibitor, such as indomethacin. In premature infants whose PDA is unable to be close by medical management; however, for full term infants and adults, surgical ligation is an option for closing the ductus arteriosus. Recently, medicine has developed and reviewed alternatives to surgical closure such as interventional cardiac catheterization [7-8, 11, 16, 20-21]. A cardiologist can help individuals determine the best method for treatment based on their physical symptoms and medical history.
The sources of data which are discussed and analyzed about surgical ligation of PDA are most from one or some medical centers up to now; however, these data cannot present the true event of a country. No any study about this issue, whose source of data is from the database of National Health Insurance, which is a full data of medical record in a country or region and obtained via application for research, has been discussed and analyzed.
Literature Reviews
Although methods for treatment of PDA are various;
medical procedures, such as drugs administration [2, 5, 9-10, 13, 19] or catheter embolization [11, 16, 20]
are generally precedent. However, surgical intervention for PDA closure is still envisaged while medical procedures are failed or contraindicated.
Many reports [2, 9, 13, 19] suggest that medical closure of PDA is not always successful, including reopening the PDA after drugs administration [12, 23], hemolysis happening or occlusion devices dropping in pulmonary artery after catheter embolization [3, 22]. On the other hand, many newer and safer surgical procedures are present, such as video-assisted thoracotomy (VAT) [15, 18],
minimally invasive surgery [14], surgery in NICU [4, 6], and so on. Nonetheless, failure of surgical ligation for PDA still occurs due to various reasons, such as insufficient facility of some hospitals, inexperienced ability of neonatal care and cardiovascular surgery, etc.
Unfortunately, failure of surgical ligation of PDA also occurs in Taiwan, even the majority of these operations are performed in equal level of medical center and we have sufficient ability of neonatal care and cardiovascular surgery. We use the database of National Health Insurance to search and discuss the results about failure rate of surgical ligation for PDA.
Materials and Methods
In Taiwan, National Health Insurance is compulsive and general; most of the database of National Health Insurance is partial and selected, which cannot be used to compare each other. By exception, the medical records of major diseases are complete. Because all patients with PDA belong to one of major diseases, and the database of major diseases is full without any selection, we can use this database to analyze the results of surgical ligation of PDA in Taiwan.
In this study, failure for surgical ligation of PDA is defined that enrolled patients who receives more than once surgical ligation in this four-year period; under this condition, the failure rate will be countered to the first year and the first hospital.
In addition, patients who receive surgical ligation of PDA and stay at hospital more than one month due to major disease belongs to continuous admission, which may present more than once at the database of National Health Insurance; in this situation, surgery is successful.
Therefore, we collected and analyzed the data of surgical ligation of PDA from the database of National Health Insurance in different years and various kinds of hospital.
Results
During a four-year period (1996~1999), 1708 patients
receive surgical ligation of PDA from the database of National Health insurance in Taiwan. 52 patients who receive more than once of PDA ligation are compatible with the definition of failed PDA surgery in this period;
the mean failure rate is 3.04%.
The failure rate of different years and various kinds of hospital in this four-year period are also presented at table 1 and table 2, respectively. At table 2, no failure case of surgical ligation is noted in some kinds of hospital.
Table 1: The annual failure rate
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