Christopher J Petit, Jennifer C Romano, Jeffrey D Zampi, Sara K Pasquali, Courtney E McCracken, Nikhil K Chanani, Andrea S Les, Kristin M Burns, Allison Crosby-Thompson, Mario Stylianou, Bernet Kato, Andrew C Glatz
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Two multicenter retrospective studies suggest that DAS is associated with similar or superior survival compared with SPS. These studies offer the best evidence to-date, and yet both have important limitations. The authors describe herein the rationale and design of the COMPASS (COmparison of Methods for Pulmonary blood flow Augmentation: Shunt vs Stent [COMPASS]) Trial (NCT05268094, IDE G210212). The COMPASS Trial aims to randomize 236 neonates with DD-PBF to either DAS or SPS across approximately 27 pediatric centers in North America. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
患有先天性心脏病和导管依赖性肺血流(DD-PBF)的新生儿需要早期干预。历史上,这种干预措施最常见的是外科全身-肺分流术(SPS;例如,Blalock-Thomas-Taussig 分流术)。然而,在过去的二十年中,出现了经导管动脉支架置入术(DAS)这种替代 SPS 的方法。虽然许多报告都指出了 DAS 方法的安全性和耐久性,但很少有研究对 DAS 和 SPS 的结果进行比较。现有的报告主要由小队列单中心回顾性研究组成。两项多中心回顾性研究表明,与 SPS 相比,DAS 的存活率相似或更高。这些研究提供了迄今为止最好的证据,但也都存在重要的局限性。作者在此介绍了 COMPASS(肺血流增强方法比较,分流与支架)的原理和设计:分流与支架[COMPASS])试验(NCT05268094,IDE G210212)的设计原理。COMPASS 试验旨在将 236 名患有 DD-PBF 的新生儿随机分配给北美约 27 个儿科中心的 DAS 或 SPS。该试验的目的是通过随机平衡新生儿队列,比较 DAS 和 SPS 在新生儿第一年内的重要临床结果,以评估是否有一种缓解方法显示出治疗优势。
Rationale and Design of the Randomized COmparison of Methods for Pulmonary Blood Flow Augmentation: Shunt Versus Stent (COMPASS) Trial: A Pediatric Heart Network Study.
Neonates with congenital heart disease and ductal-dependent pulmonary blood flow (DD-PBF) require early intervention. Historically, this intervention was most often a surgical systemic-to-pulmonary shunt (SPS; eg, Blalock-Thomas-Taussig shunt). However, over the past two decades, an alternative to SPS has emerged in the form of transcatheter ductal artery stenting (DAS). While many reports have indicated safety and durability of the DAS approach, few studies compare outcomes between DAS and SPS. The reports that do exist are comprised primarily of small-cohort single-center reviews. Two multicenter retrospective studies suggest that DAS is associated with similar or superior survival compared with SPS. These studies offer the best evidence to-date, and yet both have important limitations. The authors describe herein the rationale and design of the COMPASS (COmparison of Methods for Pulmonary blood flow Augmentation: Shunt vs Stent [COMPASS]) Trial (NCT05268094, IDE G210212). The COMPASS Trial aims to randomize 236 neonates with DD-PBF to either DAS or SPS across approximately 27 pediatric centers in North America. The goal of this trial is to compare important clinical outcomes between DAS and SPS over the first year of life in a cohort of neonates balanced by randomization in order to assess whether one method of palliation demonstrates therapeutic superiority.