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Assessing Neurodevelopment in Congenital Heart Disease.

Abnormal Neurodevelopment Detection in Congenital Heart Disease: Predictive Methods Based on Prenatal and Postnatal Factors.

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02996630
Acronym
NEUROHEART
Enrollment
250
Registered
2016-12-19
Start date
2013-05-31
Completion date
2018-05-31
Last updated
2016-12-19

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Congenital Heart Disease

Keywords

LVOTO, Fallot, Great Arteries Transposition

Brief summary

Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most prevalent congenital malformation affecting 1 in 100 newborns per year. Children with CHD are a known risk population for brain injury, with neurodevelopmental alterations shown over time in up to 50% of cases. No adequate description exists of the type of neurocognitive anomalies or risk factors associated with CHD, and consequently no prognostic markers that may allow identification of high-risk cases are available.

Detailed description

The main objectives of this study are: 1. to describe the neurodevelopmental outcome of patients with CHD at 24 months of age; 2. identify the subgroup with poorer outcome; and 3. evaluate the utility of fetal and postnatal diagnostic techniques for early detection of patients at risk for altered neurological outcomes. Seven Spanish referral centers for CHD included in the research network on maternal and child health currently participating in this prospective multicentric case-control coordinated study. Fetuses with CHD (transposition of great arteries, tetralogy of Fallot, hypoplastic left heart syndrome and septal defects) will be studied from 24 weeks of gestation to 2 years of age. Diagnostic tests will be repeated throughout the study in all patients, from the fetal period to 24 months of age, and will include: fetal cerebral hemodynamic Doppler assessment, functional echocardiography, brain MRI, regional cerebral oxymetry, electroencephalography and serum neurological and cardiac biomarkers analysis. Neurodevelopmental assessment will be made at 12 months of age using the ages and stages questionnaire (ASQ) and at 24 months of age with the Bayley-III test. From this data, statistical analysis will select the most useful as predictors of damage; to be then combined and create algorithms for predicting brain damage and poor neurodevelopment. Once description has been made, we will proceed to identify amongst our results, children with the poorest neurological outcome and remark possible common prenatal and early life markers in them as well as the CHD severity they present. While advances in early diagnosis and postnatal management have increased survival in CHD children, worrying long-term outcomes, particularly neurodevelopmental disability, have emerged as a key prognostic factor in the counseling of these pregnancies. Evidence available does not allow clinicians to assess on neurological prognosis although has opened up the possibility of finding prenatal markers of brain damage. Even though, no prospective studies have been performed until now. We present a multicentric prospective study able to recruit enough fetal CHD affected pregnancies to obtain neurological prognostic tools.

Interventions

PROCEDURESonography

Fetal Ultrasound exploration

DEVICEMagnetic Resonance Imaging

Fetal MRI for brain study

OTHERBailey Test

Neurodevelopment paediatric assessment test performed at 2 years of age.

PROCEDURESurgical intervention

Congenital Heart Disease repair

PROCEDUREBrain monitoring

EEG and continuous brain oximetry before surgery.

Cord blood samples will be taken after birth in both groups.

Sponsors

Hospital Sant Joan de Deu
CollaboratorOTHER
Hospital Universitario La Paz
CollaboratorOTHER
Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre
CollaboratorOTHER
Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañon
CollaboratorOTHER
Fundacion Dexeus
CollaboratorOTHER
Hospital Universitari Vall d'Hebron Research Institute
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Single pregnancies * Major Congenital Heart Disease * Informed Consent Signed

Exclusion criteria

* Major extra-cardiac malformations * Parental Refusal to participate * Maternal Chronic Disease * Multiple Pregnancies

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Bailey-III test punctuation45 minutesResults in pediatric Bailey-III test scale

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Lateral sulcus depthone dayLateral sulcus depth (mm) measured with MRI
Cerebral insulaone dayInsula (mm) measured with MRI
Brain biometriesone dayCalcarine sulcus depth (mm)
Cerebral cingulata sulcusone dayCingulata sulcus depth (mm) measured with MRI
Corpus callosumone dayCorpus callosum (mm) measured with MRI
Biparietal diameter (mm)one dayBiparietal diameter (mm) measured with MRI
Umbilical dopplerone dayUmbilical artery pulsatility index
Middle cerebral artery dopplerone dayMiddle cerebral artery pulsatility index
Angiogenic PLGF (placental growth factor)Two daysPlacental growth factor in maternal serum
Angiogenic s-FLt (soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase)Two daysSoluble fms-like tyrosine kinase factor in maternal serum
Cerebellumone dayCerebellum vermis (mm) measured with MRI

Countries

Spain

Contacts

Primary ContactIrene Ribera, MD
irene.ribera@vhir.org934893000
Backup ContactAina Ruiz, MD
aruizrom@gmail.com934893000

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 2, 2026