Technical Feasibility on the Use of Optical Coherence Tomography in the Evaluation of Pediatric Pulmonary Venous Stenosis

Jenny E. Zablah, Barry O’Callaghan, Michael Shorofsky, Dunbar Ivy, Gareth J. Morgan

Children’s Hospital Colorado and University of Colorado School of Medicine.
United States

Pediatric Cardiology
Pediatr Cardiol 2022; 43: 1054-1063
DOI: 10.1007/s00246-022-02824-0

Abstract
Pulmonary vein stenosis (PVS) in children is a morbid disease and limited progress has been made in improving outcomes for this heterogenous group of patients. Evaluation is currently limited to imaging techniques that fail to provide an adequate overview of the intraluminal and luminal pathology perpetuating our limited understanding of this condition. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an imaging modality which provides intraluminal profiling with microstructural detail through optical reflective technology. We sought to evaluate whether its use was technically feasible in pediatric PVS and whether the imaging data provided potentially useful outputs for clinical utility. Eleven patients were prospectively selected from our cardiac catheterization for OCT evaluation of their pulmonary veins (PV) during elective catheterization for PVS. Measurements were taken both pre and post intervention using both manual and automated tools. Stent morphology was characterized. Eleven patients had evaluation of 34 pulmonary veins, with 7 patients having more than one assessment, for a total of 25 overall catheterizations. Most patients were female (75%). Median age at cardiac catheterization was 35 months (range 5-45 months). Median weight of subjects was 10.6 kg (3.7-14.2) with a median BSA documented at 0.505 m2 (0.21-0.57). Median number of pulmonary veins involved was 3, (range 1-5 veins) and median contrast volume of 2.9 mL/kg (0.7-3.7) given. Median radiation dose (DAP) was 6095 µGy·cm2 (1670-12,400). Median number of previous cardiac catheterizations was 7 (range 1-11). All of the vessels with a diameter < 5 mm were adequately visualized. Of all the OCT images acquired, in 15 vessels (44%) contrast was used to clear the vessels from blood as an angiogram was required at the time, in the other 19 vessels (56%), saline was used with adequate imaging. There were no complications related to OCT. OCT is technically feasible to use in pediatric patients without any directly related complications. It provides intraluminal anatomy in children with both native and treated pulmonary venous stenosis when vessel size is less than 5 mm.

Category
Stenosis or Obstruction of Normal Pulmonary Venous Connections
Stenosis or Obstruction of Pulmonary Veins Following Surgical Repair of Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Connections
Diagnostic Testing. Invasive

Year of Publication: 2022

Age Focus: Pediatric

Article Type: Retrospective Observational Cohort Studies (>10 patients)

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