Managing uncertainty in decision-making of common congenital cardiac defects

C.J. McMahon*, S. Sendzikaite, A. Jegatheeswaran, Y.F. Cheung, D.S. Madjalany, V. Hjortdal, A.N. Redington, J.P. Jacobs, M. Asoodar, M. Sibbald, T. Geva, J.J.G. van Merrienboer, J.T. Tretter

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Decision-making in congenital cardiac care, although sometimes appearing simple, may prove challenging due to lack of data, uncertainty about outcomes, underlying heuristics, and potential biases in how we reach decisions. We report on the decision-making complexities and uncertainty in management of five commonly encountered congenital cardiac problems: indications for and timing of treatment of subaortic stenosis, closure or observation of small ventricular septal defects, management of new-onset aortic regurgitation in ventricular septal defect, management of anomalous aortic origin of a coronary artery in an asymptomatic patient, and indications for operating on a single anomalously draining pulmonary vein. The strategy underpinning each lesion and the indications for and against intervention are outlined. Areas of uncertainty are clearly delineated. Even in the presence of "simple" congenital cardiac lesions, uncertainty exists in decision-making. Awareness and acceptance of uncertainty is first required to facilitate efforts at mitigation. Strategies to circumvent uncertainty in these scenarios include greater availability of evidence-based medicine, larger datasets, standardised clinical assessment and management protocols, and potentially the incorporation of artificial intelligence into the decision-making process.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1705-1717
Number of pages13
JournalCardiology in the Young
Volume32
Issue number11
Early online date1 Oct 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2022

Keywords

  • Anomalous coronary artery
  • aortic regurgitation
  • decision-making
  • subaortic stenosis
  • ventricular septal defect
  • uncertainty
  • VENTRICULAR SEPTAL-DEFECT
  • PULMONARY VENOUS CONNECTION
  • DISCRETE SUBAORTIC STENOSIS
  • ANOMALOUS AORTIC ORIGIN
  • CORONARY CUSP PROLAPSE
  • ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC MODEL
  • COMPLEXITY SCIENCE
  • SURGICAL CLOSURE
  • NATURAL-HISTORY
  • OUTFLOW TRACT

Cite this