Background: We present a case series of right ventricle (RV) rehabilitation after the Starnes procedure in patients with Ebstein anomaly (EA), applying the Cone repair of the tricuspid valve (TV) to achieve 2-ventricle or 1.5-ventricle physiology.
Methods: This is a retrospective database analysis from 2 institutions in North America. We included all consecutive cases of Cone repair after the Starnes procedure. The data are expressed as median and interquartile range (IQR).
Results: Eleven patients underwent RV rehabilitation between 2019 and 2023 after initial Starnes palliation at a median age of 27 months (IQR, 20.5 months). All patients were critically ill before their Starnes procedure, and 4 were on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Before the Cone repair, the median preoperative regurgitant velocity at the Starnes patch was 1.65 m/s (IQR, 1.3 m/s). During the Cone procedure, 9 patients required a concomitant pulmonary valve repair, of whom 3 needed a transannular monocusp patch. Four patients were successfully rerouted to a 2-ventricle repair, and 7 patients with a previous Glenn achieved 1.5-ventricle circulation. There were no cases of heart block and no deaths. Seven patients had trivial, 3 patients had mild, and 1 patient had moderate tricuspid regurgitation (TR) at a median follow-up of 11 months (IQR, 21.5 months). There was no significant TV stenosis; all patients had good functional status at the last follow-up despite severe RV dysfunction in 1 patient.
Conclusions: After the Starnes procedure, the Cone repair allowed RV rehabilitation, resulting in trivial or mild TR at a midterm follow-up. The Starnes procedure is a reproducible technique that no longer commits patients to lifetime single-ventricle physiology.
Keywords: 1.5 ventricle; Ebstein anomaly; Glenn; Starnes; biventricular repair; cone repair; right ventricle; single ventricle; tricuspid valve.
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