Objective: The Fontan operation is a staged palliation for complex congenital heart disease and single ventricle physiology. Perioperative survivors of the Fontan operation experience long-term cardiac complications, including death. Liver and renal dysfunction are reported in these patients and have a direct effect on morbidity and mortality. This study aims to investigate whether the Model for End-stage Liver Disease eXcluding INR score (function of creatinine and total bilirubin, MELD-XI) predicts risk for cardiac mortality or transplantation in patients with Fontan circulation.
Design and setting: Retrospective, single-centre study. Time of first evaluation was the time of the earliest available MELD-XI score measurement, and follow-up was terminated by a cardiac event or by the last clinical evaluation.
Patients: Patients surviving after Fontan surgery and evaluated at Boston Children's Hospital between 1993 and 2008.
Main outcome measure: Composite endpoint of sudden death, death from congestive heart failure or cardiac transplantation.
Results: The MELD-XI score was calculated as MELD-XI=11.76(loge creatinine)+5.112(loge total bilirubin)+9.44. Ninety-six patients were included (52 male, median age 26 years). After a mean follow-up period of 5.7 years, 18 patients (19%) experienced the composite end point. Baseline MELD-XI score was independently and directly related to the incidence of the composite endpoint (HR for high MELD-XI score group of 7.76, 95% CI 2.05 to 29.33, p=0.008).
Conclusions: Fontan patients with a higher MELD-XI score have shorter freedom from sudden cardiac death, death from congestive heart failure and cardiac transplantation.