Tetralogy of Fallot Outcomes
Parents can use these charts to compare outcomes (what happens later on in life after surgery) of different techniques or different centers.
A common type of congenital heart disease (CHD), Tetralogy of Fallot has four major features:
- a hole between two chambers of the heart (ventricular septal defect or VSD),
- obstruction of blood flow to the lungs (right ventricular outflow tract obstruction or RVOTO),
- a misplaced aorta that sits on top of the VSD (an overriding aorta), and
- thickening of the right pumping chamber of the heart (ventricular hypertrophy).
This graph shows survival chances after getting a Tetralogy of Fallot repair. The arrow at 10 years indicates that 95% of patients will survive 10 years after their repair. Similarly, the arrow at 15 years indicates that 90% of patients are expected to survive 15 years after the repair.
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This graph shows how likely it is to need any type of reoperation after getting a Tetralogy of Fallot repair. The arrow at 10 years indicates that 85% of patients won’t need a reoperation 10 years after their repair. Similarly, the arrow at 15 years indicates the same concept for 71% of patients.
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How to Read and Interpret These Numbers
The goal of these graphs is to predict what can happen in more than 10 years. To do so, we look at all the data and information we receive for every single patient that we have operated on.