Tetralogy of Fallot with Absent Pulmonary Valve: A Continuing Challenge

Abstract
Absent pulmonary valve syndrome (APVS); the combination of tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) with agenesis of the pulmonary valve, is a relatively rare cardiac malformation. Despite the anatomic similarity with classic TOF, the pathophysiology is strikingly different. Data on 10 patients (3 male, 7 female) with APVS, treated between January 1978 and December 1995, were retrospectively reviewed. During this period a total of 2920 children underwent correction of a variety of congenital cardiac anomalies, of which 246 patients (8%) had a correction for TOF. Two patients with APVS presented within the first four months of life with severe cardiorespiratory distress and required several operative procedures. The remaining eight patients had only mild to moderate respiratory and/or cardiac symptoms and elective intracardiac repair was performed on those between the ages of 10 months and 9.5 years. Associated cardiac anomalies seen in five patients included aberrant coronary artery, absent or interrupted left pulmonary artery, partial AVSD and aberrant azygos continuation. In those electively corrected, the strategies used were ventriculotomy (7), pulmonary homograft (3) and aneurysmorrhaphy (2). There were two deaths, one in each group of patients, as a result of progressive respiratory insufficiency and cardiac tamponade, respectively. The follow-up of the eight survivors ranged from 2 to 11 years (median 6.75). All have a normal effort tolerance; only one child is on digoxin therapy, and one child continues to suffer bronchospastis episodes. Our experience with infants with this lesion is limited but underlines the different approaches required, depending on the age of presentation.