Congenital heart disease in children
Peer reviewed by Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGPLast updated by Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGPLast updated 18 Nov 2022
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What is congenital heart disease?
Congenital heart disease covers a wide spectrum from small defects, which may be totally asymptomatic and compatible with a normal lifespan, to more severe forms which require urgent intervention. Many defects are possible but most defects either obstruct flow of blood in the heart or in vessels near to it or cause blood to take an abnormal route through the heart. More rarely only one ventricle may be present, or the right or left side of the heart has failed to form properly (hypoplastic heart). Significant amounts of blood shunting from right to left without traversing the lungs causes cyanotic congenital heart disease.
The management of congenital heart disease has improved so much over the years that many affected children are now adults. See the separate Congenital Heart Disease in Adults article.
Classification
Classification into five groups based on pathophysiology has been suggested as it would be helpful in planning management.1 However, for ease of understanding, congenital heart disease is best classified into two groups - namely:
Non-cyanotic
Cyanotic
Tricuspid atresia: complete absence of the tricuspid valve; an ASD must be present to maintain blood flow.
Total anomalous pulmonary venous return: all four pulmonary veins are malpositioned and make anomalous connections to the systemic venous circulation.
Persistent truncus arteriosus.
Hypoplastic left heart: the left side of the heart is severely underdeveloped.
Pulmonary atresia: the pulmonary valve is completely closed and the only source of pulmonary blood flow is a PDA.
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How common is congenital heart disease? (Epidemiology)
The reported total birth prevalence of congenital heart disease in Europe is 8.2 per thousand live births which is higher than reported birth prevalence in the USA (6.9 per thousand live births). The highest birth prevalence of congenital heart disease (9.3 per thousand) is reported from Asia.2
Congenital heart disease accounts for nearly one third of all major congenital anomalies and is the most common congenital condition diagnosed in newborns.
The prevalence of adult congenital heart disease is increasing at a rapid pace and currently there are twice as many adults with congenital heart disease as compared with children.3
Risk factors
The relative risk of recurrence of congenital heart disease increases if a first-degree relative has a congenital heart disease. While the overall relative risk for all congenital heart disease is estimated to be 3, it is much higher for certain congenital heart diseases such as heterotaxia (relative risk 80). Other congenital heart disease with significantly high recurrence risk are atrioventricular septal defects and left and right ventricular outflow obstructive lesions.4
Risk of congenital heart disease is increased in consanguineous unions, especially at first cousin level; this needs to be taken into account at time of genetic counselling.5
A fetus may be affected during cardiac development by intrauterine infection such as rubella, or drugs and toxins taken by the mother, including lithium and alcohol.
Some genetic conditions are associated with a higher incidence of congenital heart disease, including Down's syndrome, DiGeorge's syndrome, Williams' syndrome, Noonan's syndrome and Turner syndrome.6
Maternal diabetes mellitus is associated with an increased incidence (8.5 per hundred live births) of congenital heart disease.7
Lack of folic acid during the first trimester is associated with neural tube defects but a link with congenital heart disease has not been established.8
Congenital heart disease symptoms (presentation)
The cardiovascular system is complex, as the circulation changes from fetal to infant and there may be transient problems such as PDA or patent foramen ovale, especially in premature babies.
Many congenital heart anomalies are now diagnosed before delivery, by detailed antenatal scans.
Congenital heart disease can also be suspected and diagnosed in asymptomatic neonates during the neonatal screening examination which includes checking femoral pulses and auscultation for heart murmurs. See also the separate Neonatal Examination (Screening) article.
Introduction of pulse oximetry as a screening test in neonates has helped in earlier detection of congenital heart disease. Although this is currently not universal practice, it is being introduced in many units in the UK.9
Babies born with complex congenital heart disease, where either the systemic or pulmonary circulation is dependent on the arterial duct remaining patent (Duct-dependent congenital heart disease), presently acutely in the first week or two of life.10 Two presentations are described:
In those with severe left-sided obstructive lesions: systemic blood flow is dependent on right-to-left blood flow through a PDA. Closure of the duct soon after birth causes acute, severe cardiovascular collapse requiring immediate cardiovascular resuscitation and prostaglandin infusion. Examples of left-sided ductus-dependent congenital heart disease include hypoplastic left heart syndrome, critical aortic stenosis, coarctation of aorta and interrupted aortic arch.
In those with severe right-sided duct-dependent lesions, closure of the ductus causes increasing hypoxia and cyanosis. Examples include pulmonary atresia, severe tetralogy of Fallot, tricuspid atresia and Ebstein's anomaly. Transposition of great arteries also presents as a blue baby. Urgent cardiovascular resuscitation and prostaglandin infusion are the mainstay of treatment.
Babies with significant left-to-right shunts (VSD, ASD, PDA, aorto-pulmonary window) are asymptomatic at birth but can present with signs of heart failure and faltering growth in early infancy.
Others are diagnosed at various ages subsequent to the detection of a heart murmur as part of routine screening or during clinical examination for intercurrent illness.
Heart murmurs. See also the separate Heart Murmurs in Children article:
Not all murmurs are pathological.
Murmurs heard in the first week to months of life are more likely to be due to congenital heart disease than those discovered in later childhood years. Although it remains controversial, some experts are recommending echocardiography for all neonates with heart murmurs.11
Murmurs may not appear until an infant has left hospital, as the pulmonary vascular resistance changes with the closure of the ductus arteriosus. Hence, a child with a VSD may have no signs for the first 24 hours and a child with a hypoplastic left heart may appear healthy until the ductus closes.12
Routine child health surveillance in the UK and in other developed countries has ensured that the majority of children with significant disease are diagnosed at an early stage.
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Investigations10
Investigation should be preceded by a thorough health and development history of the infant or child as well as a history of the pregnancy, including the mother's health and drug use during the pregnancy, and a family history of cardiac abnormalities.
Babies developing severe cardiovascular and respiratory distress/collapse require urgent hospital admission, CXR, blood gases, assessment of renal function and electrolytes and assessment of other possible causes of cardiovascular collapse - eg, full infection screen. Clinical assessment should include checking for femoral pulses and measurement of pre- and post-ductal saturations.
Murmurs arising during the first days or weeks of life should be referred to a paediatrician for assessment.
The initial investigation of choice is echocardiography. It is non-invasive. It can elucidate both anatomy and flow and will give a conclusive diagnosis in most cases.
Cardiac catheterisation may be required in more severe cases to assess the extent of the problem and to prepare for correction of the problem.
Congenital heart disease treatment and management
Some children with congenital heart disease will require no specific treatment but may be at risk of infective endocarditis. See the separate Prevention of Infective Endocarditis article.
Acute severe presentations may require:
If the disorder is severe enough to compromise the circulation and the oxygenation of the blood, or to put a strain on the heart or lungs, surgical correction or non-surgical intervention, such as balloon valvotomy, may be required.
In the most severe cases (for example, hypoplastic heart), multiple palliative surgical procedures or a heart transplant may be required.
The type and extent of the correction required will depend on the underlying anomaly.
Advances made in paediatric cardiology, cardiac surgery and critical care have significantly improved the survival rate of children with congenital heart disease, leading to an increase in children with congenital heart disease presenting for non-cardiac surgical procedures. Despite the increase in case numbers, there has been a significant decline in mortality rates. Careful patient selection and medical optimisation of children aligned with specific expertise at dedicated children's hospitals may lead to improvement in mortality rate.15
Complications
All forms of congenital heart disease, apart from ASD, carry a risk of infective endocarditis.
There may be failure to thrive or just difficulty in joining in with games and sports with other children.
A right-to-left shunt can permit paradoxical embolism that may present with a systemic embolism such as a stroke.
Heart failure: congenital heart disease is frequently associated with ventricular dysfunction, volume or pressure overload.16
A left-to-right shunt does not cause cyanosis but the high volume pumped by the right side may result in pulmonary hypertension and, if this builds up and exceeds systemic pressure, the shunt may reverse from right to left. This is called Eisenmenger's complex and it may not develop until the child is an adolescent or adult.
Cyanosis results in polycythaemia; a haemoglobin value as high as 20 g/dL may cause additional difficulty as the blood is so viscous.
Prognosis
Survival in children with congenital heart disease has increased substantially since the 1980s.17
However, children who have undergone surgery for congenital heart disease still have impaired survival compared to the general population and often need new operations or catheter-based procedures.18
The long-term outcome is exceptionally good for some conditions such as surgically corrected isolated VSDs, with no excess mortality compared to the general population.19
Delayed diagnosis of congenital heart disease causes significant morbidity and mortality.20
Prevention
Although many forms of congenital heart disease are not currently preventable, the avoidance of known risk factors such as drugs and alcohol during pregnancy will help to reduce the risk.
Vaccination against rubella has reduced the number of children born with rubella syndrome. Reduced uptake of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine could allow the incidence of congenital rubella to increase again.
Further reading and references
- Percutaneous closure of patent foramen ovale to prevent recurrent cerebral embolic events; NICE Interventional Procedure Guidance, December 2013
- Schwartz S, Olsen M, Woo JG, et al Congenital heart disease and the prevalence of underweight and obesity from age 1 to 15 years: data on a nationwide sample of children BMJ Paediatrics Open 2017;1:e000127. doi: 10.1136/bmjpo-2017-000127
- Liu Y, Chen S, Zuhlke L, et al; Global prevalence of congenital heart disease in school-age children: a meta-analysis and systematic review. BMC Cardiovasc Disord. 2020 Nov 19;20(1):488. doi: 10.1186/s12872-020-01781-x.
- Thiene G, Frescura C; Anatomical and pathophysiological classification of congenital heart disease. Cardiovasc Pathol. 2010 Sep-Oct;19(5):259-74. doi: 10.1016/j.carpath.2010.02.006. Epub 2010 May 13.
- van der Linde D, Konings EE, Slager MA, et al; Birth prevalence of congenital heart disease worldwide: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2011 Nov 15;58(21):2241-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2011.08.025.
- Avila P, Mercier LA, Dore A, et al; Adult congenital heart disease: a growing epidemic. Can J Cardiol. 2014 Dec;30(12 Suppl):S410-9. doi: 10.1016/j.cjca.2014.07.749. Epub 2014 Sep 28.
- Shieh JT, Srivastava D; Heart malformation: what are the chances it could happen again? Circulation. 2009 Jul 28;120(4):269-71. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.878637. Epub 2009 Jul 13.
- Shieh JT, Bittles AH, Hudgins L; Consanguinity and the risk of congenital heart disease. Am J Med Genet A. 2012 May;158A(5):1236-41. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.35272. Epub 2012 Apr 9.
- Ko JM; Genetic Syndromes associated with Congenital Heart Disease. Korean Circ J. 2015 Sep;45(5):357-61. doi: 10.4070/kcj.2015.45.5.357. Epub 2015 Jul 7.
- Hornberger LK; Maternal diabetes and the fetal heart. Heart. 2006 Aug;92(8):1019-21. Epub 2006 May 12.
- Bower C, Miller M, Payne J, et al; Folate intake and the primary prevention of non-neural birth defects. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2006 Jun;30(3):258-61.
- Jones AJ, Howarth C, Nicholl R, et al; The impact and efficacy of routine pulse oximetry screening for CHD in a local hospital. Cardiol Young. 2016 Feb 24:1-9.
- Evaluation of suspected congenital heart disease; Paediatrics and Child Health, January 2011
- Al-Ammouri I, Ayoub F, Dababneh R; Is pre-discharge echocardiography indicated for asymptomatic neonates with a heart murmur? A retrospective analysis. Cardiol Young. 2015 Sep 10:1-4.
- Abdurrahman L, Bockoven JR, Pickoff AS, et al; Pediatric cardiology update: Office-based practice of pediatric cardiology for the primary care provider. Curr Probl Pediatr Adolesc Health Care. 2003 Nov-Dec;33(10):318-47.
- Resuscitation and support of transition of babies at birth; Resuscitation Council UK Guidelines, 2021
- McGovern E, Sands AJ; Perinatal management of major congenital heart disease. Ulster Med J. 2014 Sep;83(3):135-9.
- Nasr VG, Staffa SJ, Faraoni D, et al; Trends in mortality rate in patients with congenital heart disease undergoing noncardiac surgical procedures at children's hospitals. Sci Rep. 2021 Jan 15;11(1):1543. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-81161-3.
- Hinton RB, Ware SM; Heart Failure in Pediatric Patients With Congenital Heart Disease. Circ Res. 2017 Mar 17;120(6):978-994. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.116.308996.
- Mandalenakis Z, Giang KW, Eriksson P, et al; Survival in Children With Congenital Heart Disease: Have We Reached a Peak at 97%? J Am Heart Assoc. 2020 Nov 17;9(22):e017704. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.120.017704. Epub 2020 Nov 6.
- Larsen SH, Emmertsen K, Johnsen SP, et al; Survival and morbidity following congenital heart surgery in a population-based cohort of children--up to 12 years of follow-up. Congenit Heart Dis. 2011 Jul-Aug;6(4):322-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1747-0803.2011.00495.x. Epub 2011 Mar 21.
- Jortveit J, Leirgul E, Eskedal L, et al; Mortality and complications in 3495 children with isolated ventricular septal defects. Arch Dis Child. 2016 Apr 18. pii: archdischild-2015-310154. doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2015-310154.
- Murni IK, Wirawan MT, Patmasari L, et al; Delayed diagnosis in children with congenital heart disease: a mixed-method study. BMC Pediatr. 2021 Apr 21;21(1):191. doi: 10.1186/s12887-021-02667-3.
Article history
The information on this page is written and peer reviewed by qualified clinicians.
Next review due: 17 Nov 2027
18 Nov 2022 | Latest version
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