Comparative Outcomes of Right Versus Left Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia: A Multicenter Analysis

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Alexey Abramov, Weijia Fan, Rebecca Hernan, Ariela L. Zenilman, Julia Wynn, Gudrun Aspelund, Julie Khlevner, Usha Krishnan, Foong-Yen Lim, George B. Mychaliska, Brad W. Warner, Robert Cusick, Timothy Crombleholme, Dai Chung, Melissa E. Danko, Amy J. Wagne Published:

Author / Expert

Alexey Abramov, Weijia Fan, Rebecca Hernan, Ariela L. Zenilman, Julia Wynn, Gudrun Aspelund, Julie Khlevner, Usha Krishnan, Foong-Yen Lim, George B. Mychaliska, Brad W. Warner, Robert Cusick, Timothy Crombleholme, Dai Chung, Melissa E. Danko, Amy J. Wagne

Topic overview

Abstract

Background

Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) occurs in 1 out of 2500–3000 live births. Right-sided CDHs (R-CDHs) comprise 25% of all CDH cases, and data are conflicting on outcomes of these patients. The aim of our study was to compare outcomes in patients with right versus left CDH (L-CDH).

Methods

We analyzed a multicenter prospectively enrolled database to compare baseline characteristics and outcomes of neonates enrolled from January 2005 to January 2019 with R-CDH vs. L-CDH.

Results

A total of 588, 495 L-CDH, and 93 R-CDH patients with CDH were analyzed. L-CDHs were more frequently diagnosed prenatally (p=0.011). Lung-to-head ratio was similar in both cohorts. R-CDHs had a lower frequency of primary repair (p=0.022) and a higher frequency of need for oxygen at discharge (p=0.013). However, in a multivariate analysis, need for oxygen at discharge was no longer significantly different. There were no differences in long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes assessed at two year follow up. There was no difference in mortality, need for ECMO, pulmonary hypertension, or hernia recurrence.

Conclusion

In this large series comparing R to L-CDH patients, we found no significant difference in mortality, use of ECMO, or pulmonary complications. Our study supports prior studies that R-CDHs are relatively larger and more often require a patch or muscle flap for repair.

Type of study

Prognosis study

Level of evidence

Level II

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