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Comprehensive comparative outcomes in children with congenital heart disease: The rationale for the Congenital Catheterization Research Collaborative
Author(s) -
Petit Christopher J.,
Qureshi Athar M.,
Glatz Andrew C.,
McCracken Courtney E.,
Kelleman Michael,
Nicholson George T.,
Meadows Jeffery J.,
Shahanavaz Shabana,
Zampi Jeffrey D.,
Law Mark A.,
Pettus Joelle A.,
Goldstein Bryan H.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
congenital heart disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.828
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 1747-0803
pISSN - 1747-079X
DOI - 10.1111/chd.12737
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiac catheterization , observational study , heart disease , psychological intervention , intensive care medicine , pulmonary atresia , incidence (geometry) , pulmonary hypertension , pediatrics , comparative effectiveness research , alternative medicine , psychiatry , pathology , physics , optics
Clinical research in the treatment of patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) is limited by the wide variety of CHD manifestations and therapeutic options as well as the generally low incidence of CHD. The availability of comprehensive, contemporary outcomes studies is therefore limited. This inadequacy may result in a lack of data‐driven medical decision making. In 2013, clinician scientists at two centers began a research collaboration, the Congenital Catheterization Research Collaborative (CCRC). Over time, the CCRC has grown to include nine cardiac centers from across the United States, with a common data coordinating center. The CCRC seeks to generate high‐quality, contemporary, statistically robust, and generalizable outcomes research which can help address important clinical questions in the treatment of CHD. To date, the CCRC has reported on multicenter outcomes in: neonates with congenital aortic stenosis, infants undergoing right ventricular decompression for pulmonary atresia and intact ventricular septum, and infants with ductal‐dependent pulmonary blood flow. The CCRC has been successful at leveraging large multicenter cohorts of patients in a contemporary period to perform comparative studies. In the future, the CCRC plans to continue to perform hypothesis‐driven retrospective and prospective observational studies of CHD populations where controversy exists or where novel interventions or therapies have emerged. Quality improvement efforts including lesion‐specific registry development may be an additional potential future target.

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