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Dive into the research topics where François Lacour-Gayet is active.

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Featured researches published by François Lacour-Gayet.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2009

An empirically based tool for analyzing mortality associated with congenital heart surgery

Sean M. O'Brien; David R. Clarke; Jeffrey P. Jacobs; Marshall L. Jacobs; François Lacour-Gayet; Christian Pizarro; Karl F. Welke; Bohdan Maruszewski; Zdzislaw Tobota; Weldon J. Miller; Leslie Hamilton; Eric D. Peterson; Constantine Mavroudis; Fred H. Edwards

OBJECTIVE Analysis of congenital heart surgery results requires a reliable method of estimating the risk of adverse outcomes. Two major systems in current use are based on projections of risk or complexity that were predominantly subjectively derived. Our goal was to create an objective, empirically based index that can be used to identify the statistically estimated risk of in-hospital mortality by procedure and to group procedures into risk categories. METHODS Mortality risk was estimated for 148 types of operative procedures using data from 77,294 operations entered into the European Association for Cardiothoracic Surgery (EACTS) Congenital Heart Surgery Database (33,360 operations) and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Congenital Heart Surgery Database (43,934 patients) between 2002 and 2007. Procedure-specific mortality rate estimates were calculated using a Bayesian model that adjusted for small denominators. Each procedure was assigned a numeric score (the STS-EACTS Congenital Heart Surgery Mortality Score [2009]) ranging from 0.1 to 5.0 based on the estimated mortality rate. Procedures were also sorted by increasing risk and grouped into 5 categories (the STS-EACTS Congenital Heart Surgery Mortality Categories [2009]) that were chosen to be optimal with respect to minimizing within-category variation and maximizing between-category variation. Model performance was subsequently assessed in an independent validation sample (n = 27,700) and compared with 2 existing methods: Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery (RACHS-1) categories and Aristotle Basis Complexity scores. RESULTS Estimated mortality rates ranged across procedure types from 0.3% (atrial septal defect repair with patch) to 29.8% (truncus plus interrupted aortic arch repair). The proposed STS-EACTS score and STS-EACTS categories demonstrated good discrimination for predicting mortality in the validation sample (C-index = 0.784 and 0.773, respectively). For procedures with more than 40 occurrences, the Pearson correlation coefficient between a procedures STS-EACTS score and its actual mortality rate in the validation sample was 0.80. In the subset of procedures for which RACHS-1 and Aristotle Basic Complexity scores are defined, discrimination was highest for the STS-EACTS score (C-index = 0.787), followed by STS-EACTS categories (C-index = 0.778), RACHS-1 categories (C-index = 0.745), and Aristotle Basic Complexity scores (C-index = 0.687). When patient covariates were added to each model, the C-index improved: STS-EACTS score (C-index = 0.816), STS-EACTS categories (C-index = 0.812), RACHS-1 categories (C-index = 0.802), and Aristotle Basic Complexity scores (C-index = 0.795). CONCLUSION The proposed risk scores and categories have a high degree of discrimination for predicting mortality and represent an improvement over existing consensus-based methods. Risk models incorporating these measures may be used to compare mortality outcomes across institutions with differing case mixes.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1995

Surgical management of neonatal coarctation

Stefano Conte; François Lacour-Gayet; A. Serraf; Miguel Sousa-Uva; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Anita Touchot; Claude Planché

Between 1983 and 1994, 307 consecutive neonates underwent coarctation repair by a single surgical technique: extended end-to-end anastomosis. Mean age at operation was 13 +/- 8 days. Isolated coarctation was present in 95 patients (group 1), 102 patients had associated ventricular septal defect (group 2), and 110 patients had associated complex intracardiac lesions (group 3). Aortic arch hypoplasia was present in 81% of the patients (62% in group 1 versus 85% in group 2 and 93% in group 3: p < 0.001). In 271 patients, the aortic arch reconstruction was performed via a left thoracotomy with normothermia (100% of group 1, 95% of group 2, and 72% of group 3); in the other 36 patients, undergoing one-stage repair or palliation of the associated lesion, it was performed via a midline sternotomy during a short period of deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest (5% of group 2 and 28% of group 3). Pulmonary artery banding was performed in 94 patients. Spontaneous ventricular septal defect closure was observed in 39% of the patients of group 2 operated on via thoracotomy. Early mortality rates in groups 1 (2%) and 2 (2%) were significantly lower than in group 3 (17%) (p < 0.001). There were 29 late deaths, all related to associated cardiac lesions or their subsequent repair. The overall total mortality was 16.9%. In group 3 this rate was significantly higher in patients undergoing two-stage procedures (47%) than in those undergoing one-stage repair (23%) (p < 0.05). All but 14 survivors were followed up for a mean of 61 +/- 36 months. Actuarial survivals at 10 years were 98% in group 1, 94% in group 2, and 60% in group 3. The recoarctation rate was 9.8%, leading to 21 reoperations and three angioplasties without mortality. Patients with a more extended or severe form of aortic arch hypoplasia had a significantly higher risk of recoarctation (p < 0.001). Actuarial freedom from reoperation for recoarctation at 10 years was 93%. The findings of this study suggest that extended end-to-end anastomosis provides an adequate and safe repair of neonatal coarctation. Low recoarctation rate, owing to effective relief of the obstruction created by aortic arch hypoplasia and to complete resection of ductal tissue, freedom from major morbidity, and feasibility via both lateral and anterior approaches are the main advantages of the extended end-to-end anastomosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1999

Surgical management of progressive pulmonary venous obstruction after repair of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection

François Lacour-Gayet; Joy Zoghbi; Alain Serraf; Emre Belli; Dominique Piot; Christian Rey; François Marçon; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Claude Planché

BACKGROUND The occurrence of a progressive pulmonary venous obstruction after the repair of the total anomalous pulmonary venous connection is a severe complication. OBJECTIVES The objectives of this study were to retrospectively review the patients with this condition and to report our experience with a new surgical technique with a sutureless in situ pericardium repair. METHODS Of 178 patients who underwent correction of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection, 16 patients (9%) experienced the development of a progressive pulmonary venous obstruction in a median interval of 4 months (5 weeks-12 years). Three patients had isolated anastomotic stenosis, 4 patients had isolated pulmonary venous ostial stenosis, and 9 patients had both. Pulmonary venous obstruction was bilateral in 7 patients. The surgical procedures used at reoperation included 8 patch enlargements, 5 ostial endarterectomies, 1 intraoperative stenting, and 7 sutureless in situ pericardium repairs. RESULTS There were 4 deaths after reoperation (4 of 15 patients; 27%). The only significant mortality risk factor was the bilateral location of the pulmonary venous obstruction (P =.045). In patients with isolated anastomotic stenosis or with only 1 pulmonary venous ostial stenosis (n = 5), there was no death, except the patient presenting with a single ventricle. In patients with 2 or more pulmonary venous ostial stenoses (n = 10), there were 3 deaths; 5 of the 7 survivors were successfully treated with the in situ pericardial technique, with normalized pulmonary artery pressure at a mean follow-up of 26 months. CONCLUSION Progressive pulmonary venous stenosis after repair of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection remains a severe complication when bilateral. The sutureless in situ pericardial repair offers a satisfactory solution, particularly on the right side.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Congenital Heart Surgery Nomenclature and Database Project: double outlet right ventricle

Henry L. Walters; Constantine Mavroudis; Christo I. Tchervenkov; Jeffrey P. Jacobs; François Lacour-Gayet; Marshall L. Jacobs

Double outlet right ventricle (DORV) is a type of ventriculoarterial connection in which both great vessels arise entirely or predominantly from the right ventricle. Although the presence of aortic-mitral discontinuity and bilateral coni are important descriptors, they should not serve as absolute prerequisites for the diagnosis of DORV. The morphology of DORV is encompassed by a careful description of the ventricular septal defect (VSD) with its relationship to the semilunar valves, the great artery relationships to each other, the coronary artery anatomy, the presence or absence of pulmonary outflow tract obstruction (POTO) and aortic outflow tract obstruction (AOTO), the tricuspid-pulmonary annular distance, and the presence or absence of associated cardiac lesions. The preferred surgical treatment involves the connection of the left ventricle to the systemic circulation by an intraventricular tunnel repair connecting the VSD to the systemic semilunar valve. This ideal surgical therapy is not always possible due to the presence of confounding anatomical barriers. A multitude of alternative surgical procedures has been devised to accommodate these more complex situations. A framework for the development of the DORV module for a pediatric cardiac surgical database is proposed.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993

Anatomic correction of transposition of the great arteries in neonates

Alain Serraf; François Lacour-Gayet; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Anita Touchot; Jean Losay; Juan Comas; Miguel Sousa Uva; Claude Planché

OBJECTIVES This retrospective study attempts to assess the results of the neonatal anatomic repair of transposition of the great arteries by a single institution. BACKGROUND Anatomic correction of transposition of the great arteries by means of the arterial switch operation is now widely accepted as the therapeutic method of choice. METHODS Four hundred thirty-two consecutive neonates underwent an arterial switch operation for various forms of transposition of the great arteries. There were 362 neonates with transposition and intact ventricular septum, 47 with a ventricular septal defect, 6 with intact ventricular septum and coarctation of the aorta and 17 with ventricular septal defect and coarctation. Among patients with coarctation, 18 underwent a single-stage repair through median sternotomy. The mean age was 13.1 +/- 4.2 days. Coronary artery distribution was described according to the origin and initial course of the arteries. RESULTS Overall in-hospital mortality was 7.8% (34 patients) and was 7.6% for transposition with intact ventricular septum, 8.5% for transposition with ventricular septal defect and 13.3% for transposition with ventricular septal defect and coarctation. Univariate analysis of risk factors revealed that coronary anatomy was the main determinant for operative survival. A mean follow-up time of 44 +/- 19 months was achieved in all but five survivors. More than 95% were in New York Heart Association functional class I, without medication and with normal left ventricular function. Reoperation was performed in 20 patients: early reoperation (< 30 days) in 4 and late reoperation in 16. Actuarial survival rates at 5 years were 91.3% (transposition with intact ventricular septum) and 81.06% (transposition with ventricular septal defect). As well, freedom from reoperation at 5 years was 96.8% (transposition with intact ventricular septum) and 84.6% (transposition with ventricular septal defect). CONCLUSIONS The arterial switch operation is feasible in almost all forms of transposition of the great arteries in neonates as primary and definitive repair. Palliative surgery is recommended in cases with complex intracardiac anatomy not amenable to early repair.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Variation in Outcomes for Benchmark Operations: An Analysis of The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Congenital Heart Surgery Database

Jeffrey P. Jacobs; Sean M. O'Brien; Sara K. Pasquali; Marshall L. Jacobs; François Lacour-Gayet; Christo I. Tchervenkov; Erle H. Austin; Christian Pizarro; Kamal K. Pourmoghadam; Frank G. Scholl; Karl F. Welke; Constantine Mavroudis

BACKGROUND We evaluated outcomes for common operations in The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Congenital Heart Surgery Database (STS-CHSDB) to provide contemporary benchmarks and examine variation between centers. METHODS Patients undergoing surgery from 2005 to 2009 were included. Centers with greater than 10% missing data were excluded. Discharge mortality and postoperative length of stay (PLOS) among patients discharged alive were calculated for 8 benchmark operations of varying complexity. Power for analyzing between-center variation in outcome was determined for each operation. Variation was evaluated using funnel plots and Bayesian hierarchical modeling. RESULTS Eighteen thousand three hundred seventy-five index operations at 74 centers were included in the analysis of 8 benchmark operations. Overall discharge mortality was: ventricular septal defect (VSD) repair = 0.6% (range, 0% to 5.1%), tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) repair = 1.1% (range, 0% to 16.7%), complete atrioventricular canal repair (AVC) = 2.2% (range, 0% to 20%), arterial switch operation (ASO) = 2.9% (range, 0% to 50%), ASO + VSD = 7.0% (range, 0% to 100%), Fontan operation = 1.3% (range, 0% to 9.1%), truncus arteriosus repair = 10.9% (0% to 100%), and Norwood procedure = 19.3% (range, 0% to 100%). Funnel plots revealed that the number of centers characterized as outliers were VSD = 0, TOF = 0, AVC = 1, ASO = 3, ASO + VSD = 1, Fontan operation = 0, truncus arteriosus repair = 4, and Norwood procedure = 11. Power calculations showed that statistically meaningful comparisons of mortality rates between centers could be made only for the Norwood procedure, for which the Bayesian-estimated range (95% probability interval) after risk-adjustment was 7.0% (3.7% to 10.3%) to 41.6% (30.6% to 57.2%). Between-center variation in PLOS was analyzed for all operations and was larger for more complex operations. CONCLUSIONS This analysis documents contemporary benchmarks for common pediatric cardiac surgical operations and the range of outcomes among centers. Variation was most prominent for the more complex operations. These data may aid in quality assessment and quality improvement initiatives.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1999

Surgical treatment of subaortic stenosis: A seventeen-year experience

Alain Serraf; Joy Zoghby; François Lacour-Gayet; Rémi Houël; Emre Belli; Lorenzo Galletti; Claude Planché

OBJECTIVE The aim of the study was to analyze the long-term results of subaortic stenosis relief and the risk factors associated with recurrence and reoperation. METHODS One hundred sixty patients with subaortic stenosis underwent biventricular repair. Before the operation the mean left ventricle-aorta gradient was 80 +/- 35 mm Hg, 57 patients had aortic regurgitation, and 34 were in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV. Median age at repair was 10 years. For discrete subaortic stenosis (n = 120), 39 patients underwent isolated membranectomy, 67 underwent membranectomy with associated septal myotomy, and 14 underwent septal myectomy. Tunnel subaortic stenosis (n = 34) was treated by myotomy in 10 cases, myectomy in 12, septoplasty in 7, Konno procedure in 3, and apical conduit in 2. Aortic valve replacement was performed in 6 cases, mitral valve replacement in 2 cases, and mitral valvuloplasty in 4 cases. RESULTS There were 5 early (3.1%) and 4 late (4.4%) deaths. Within 3.6 +/- 3.3 years a recurrent gradient greater than 30 mm Hg was found in 42 patients (27%), 20 of whom had 26 reoperations. According to multivariable Cox regression analysis survival was influenced by hypoplastic aortic anulus (P =.01) and mitral stenosis (P =.048); recurrence and reoperation were influenced by coarctation and immediate postoperative left ventricular outflow tract gradients. At a median follow-up of 13.3 years, mean left ventricle-aorta gradient was 20 +/- 13 mm Hg. Relief of the subaortic stenosis improved the degree of aortic regurgitation in 86% of patients with preoperative aortic regurgitation. Actuarial survival and freedom from reoperation rates at 15 years were 94% +/- 1.3% and 85% +/- 6%, respectively. CONCLUSION Although surgical treatment provides good results, recurrence and reoperation are significantly influenced by previous coarctation repair and by the quality of initial relief of subaortic stenosis.


The Japanese Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2002

Congenital heart surgery nomenclature and database project

Hiromi Kurosawa; J. William Gaynor; Jeffrey P. Jacobs; Marshall L. Jacobs; Martin Elliott; François Lacour-Gayet; Christo I. Tchervenkov; Bohdan Maruszewski; Constantine Mavroudis

In 1998, the first report of the Society of Thoracic Surgery (STS) National Congenital Heart Surgery Database defined clinical features for 18 congenital heart disease categories, providing a significant amount of important information and pinpointing database strengths and weaknesses. Following this report, the STS Congenital Heart Surgery Committee, working with the European Association of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery and the European Congenital Heart Surgeons Foundation, initiated the International Congenital Heart Surgery and Nomenclature Database Project. To standardize nomenclature and reporting strategies and establish a foundation for an international congenital heart surgery database. The project’s first report was published in the Annals of Thoracic Surgery in April 2000. The current report outlines modifications to the minimal dataset and diagnosis and procedure short lists.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Repair of interrupted aortic arch: A ten-year experience

A. Serraf; François Lacour-Gayet; Monica Robotin; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Miguel Sousa-Uva; R. Roussin; Claude Planché

Eighty-two consecutive patients with interrupted aortic arch were referred to our institution between 1985 and 1995. Three died before any attempt at operation and 79 underwent surgical repair. Median age at operation was 9 days (range 1 day to 6 years) and median weight was 3.0 kg (range 1.8 to 20 kg). All but one were in severe congestive heart failure and 31.5% had oliguria or anuria. Preoperative pH varied between 6.8 and 7.4 (median 7.3). Sixty-nine received prostaglandin E1 infusion and 54 received mechanical ventilation. Aggressive preoperative ressucitation was necessary in 43 cases. Preoperative transfontanellar echography (performed routinely) since 1987 revealed intracerebral bleeding in six patients. Type A interrupted aortic arch was present in 37 cases, 41 patients had type B, and one had type C. Interrupted aortic arch was associated with single ventricular septal defect in 35 cases, 24 patients had associated complex heart defects, and 30 had significant subaortic stenosis (six had both subaortic stenosis and complex association). Aortopulmonary window was found in four patients, truncus arteriosus was found in eight, and transposition of the great arteries was found in five, double-outlet right ventricle was found in one, single ventricle was found in three, multiple ventricular septal defects were found in two and superior-inferior ventricles were found in one. Sixty-four patients underwent single-stage repair and 15 underwent multistage repair. Aortic arch repair consisted of direct anastomosis in 59 cases, patch augmentation in eight, and conduit interposition in 12. Ten patients underwent associated pulmonary artery banding and 19 underwent concomitant repair of complex associated lesions. The subaortic stenosis was addressed by four surgical techniques: myotomy or myectomy in five patients; creation of a double-outlet left ventricle, aortopulmonary anastomosis, and conduit insertion between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery bifurcation in four; no direct attempt to relieve the subaortic stenosis in six; and left-sided ventricular septal defect patch in 15. Mean duration of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, crossclamp time, and cardiopulmonary bypass time were 38.8 +/- 15.6 min, 60.5 +/- 24.7 min, and 143 +/- 40.1 min, respectively. Postoperative mortality rate was 18.9% (70% confidence limits 14% to 24.6%), and overall mortality rate was 31% (70% confidence limits 20.9% to 42.2%). The results have improved with time, with an overall operative mortality rate of 12% since 1990. Univariate statistical analysis revealed that early survival was influenced by preoperative renal function, detection of cerebral bleeding by transfontanellar echography, the number of cardioplegic injections, and the date of operation. Multivariate analysis revealed that preoperative renal function and the number of cardioplegic injections were independent risk factors for early mortality. Echocardiographic measurements of the left heart-aorta complex with preoperative Z values as low as-4 demonstrated rapid growth after repair. In the presence of subaortic stenosis, better survival was obtained with a left-sided patch for ventricular septal defect closure (p < 0.05). Twenty-three patients underwent 26 reoperations for recoarctations (seven), left bronchial compression (two), second-stage repair (eight), right ventricle-pulmonary artery conduit replacement (three), and miscellaneous (four). One of the survivors was reoperated on for subaortic membrane. Survival at 5 years for the entire series was 70%. For isolated forms, it was 73.5% (90% for 1990 to 1995), for complex forms it was 70%, and in the presence of subaortic stenosis it was 60%. In conclusion, interrupted aortic arch remains a surgical challenge with continually improving results. Early diagnosis with preoperative resuscitation and adequate myocardial protection seem extremely important for further improvements. Associated subaortic stenosis or complex lesions


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Unusual forms of tracheobronchial compression in infants with congenital heart disease

Monica Robotin; Jacqueline Bruniaux; A. Serraf; M.Sousa Uva; R. Roussin; François Lacour-Gayet; Claude Planché

Three groups of unusual forms of tracheobronchial compression caused by vascular anomalies are presented. Three patients had an encircling right aortic arch with a left-sided descending aorta and ligamentum arteriosum (group 1), two patients had airway compression caused by a pincer effect between a malposed and enlarged ascending aorta and the descending aorta (group 2), and three patients had airway compression after an arterial switch operation for transposition of the great arteries (group 3). Symptoms developed in all patients before the age of 4 months, and six of them had multiple failed attempts at extubation before the surgical intervention directed at relieving the airway compression. Fiberoptic endoscopy was used in all patients as a first-line diagnostic tool and was 100% accurate in establishing the diagnosis. The operations performed were aortic uncrossing in group 1, dissection and aortopexy of the right or left main bronchus in group 2, and dissection of the left main bronchus and lysis of adhesions in group 3. In group 1 there was one early death, resulting from aspiration, and one late death 4 years later, resulting from an unrelated cause. In this group, bronchomalacia was noted after the operation and resolved gradually in the year after the intervention. In group 2, one patient died of an aortobronchial fistula after placement of a bronchial stent. Group 3 patients had good postoperative results. Two of them are completely symptom-free and one has residual bronchomalacia and may need placement of a bronchial stent.

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Constantine Mavroudis

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Bohdan Maruszewski

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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Christo I. Tchervenkov

McGill University Health Centre

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David R. Clarke

University of Colorado Denver

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Emre Belli

University of Paris-Sud

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A. Serraf

University of Paris-Sud

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