Introduction
Congenital heart defects (CHDs) account for almost a third of all congenital defects. Their prevalence varies by continent and country and the overall prevalence has risen from 0.6/1000 newborns before 1994 to 9.1/1000 newborns after 19951. In Latin-America, CHDs are the second highest cause of death in infants younger than 1 year old2. In Mexico, the real prevalence is unknown due to lacking epidemiological reports. Regional centers report a prevalence of 7.4/1000 newborns3.
Medical and surgical advances have improved the survival rate of patients with CHD. Defects that were previously untreatable nowadays can be corrected surgically4,5. A decade ago, evaluation of the health state of children with CHD only considered their physical capacity and the possible residual anatomical defects. However, the real burden of CHD is reflected in the quality of life (QoL) of the patients6,7. The World Health Organization defines QoL as an individual’s perception of their position in life, in the context of the culture and value systems in which they live, and it is affected by the person’s physical health, psychological state, personal beliefs, social relationships, and relationship to prominent features in their environment8.
Evaluating QoL in patients is an important practice because it allows for better communication between patients, parents, and health service providers, prioritizing health-related problems based on parental and/or patient preferences; it is also a specific way to monitor changes in response to a specific therapy through time and to perform screening of other physical or psychosocial health issues9.
There is an inherent subjectivity in the self-perception of QoL, which has led to designing valid and reproducible methods for its evaluation, consisting of questionnaires that generate scales to measure the different dimensions of the health-related QoL. In 2002, there were 92 different instruments to measure QoL, 45 of them being general, or not designed for a specific disease. Such instruments represent a complementary method of evaluating the response to certain treatments or therapies10.
A few attempts have been made to measure QoL in Latin-America population, using different generic questionnaires, in countries such as Cuba and Chile. In some cases, the non-validated translated versions have been used11,12. Brazil has the higher methodological quality studies13.
The KIDSCREEN-52 questionnaire is a standardized test designed to assess generic health-related QoL in healthy and chronically ill children and adolescents. In the development, generation, and validation of the questionnaire, dimensions and items relevant to respondents in different countries of Europe were identified, becoming the first transnational instrument. It has also been validated in the Spanish language and is linguistically specified for Mexico14,15.
Our hospital is a regional referral center for the correction of CHD. Unfortunately, there are no clinical studies in Mexican population to evaluate the impact of the interventions on CHD patients. The objective of this study is to evaluate the QoL in children aged 8-18 years old in Aguascalientes after corrective or palliative surgery for CHD.
Materials and methods
Study design
An observational, cross-sectional, and descriptive study was designed with children and adolescents from 8 to 18 years and took place between June 2017 and January 2018 (8 months) at the Miguel Hidalgo Centennial Hospital and five different schools (private and state schools): two elementary schools, two middle schools, and one high school.
Patients and controls
Miguel Hidalgo Centennial Hospital receives patients from the state of Aguascalientes and surrounding communities (both urban and rural). There is a social agenda for patients without resources or social security that covers the economic costs of the treatment of congenital heart diseases. Clinical files of patients who underwent corrective or palliative surgery for CHD from 2000 to 2012 (n = 642) were examined. Patients who were deceased at the time of the study (n = 71), younger than 8 years old or older than 18 years old (n = 167) or who had any recorded degree of cognitive impairment (previously evaluated by the genetics clinic and the psychology department) (n = 68) were excluded from the study. Of the 336 patients remaining, 289 had incomplete files or were lost to follow up and were excluded as well.
The control group was formed with children and adolescents of four different schools, paired by age to our patients.
Instrument
The KIDSCREEN-52 self-report questionnaire in the Mexican validated version was used. It measures 10 dimensions of health-related QoL: “physical Well-being” explores the level of physical activity, energy, and fitness; “Psychological well-being” includes positive emotions and satisfaction with life; “moods and emotions” covers how much the patient experiences depressive moods and emotions and stressful feelings; “self-perception” includes self-appearance of the body, security, and satisfaction about him/herself; “autonomy” looks at the opportunity given to the patient to create social and leisure time; “parent relations and home life” explores the quality of interaction between patient and parent; “social support and peers” examines the quality of the interaction between the patient and peers as well as their perceived support; “school environment” explores a patients perception of his/her cognitive capacity, learning and concentration and includes the patients satisfaction with his/her ability and performance at school; “social acceptance” covers the aspect of feeling rejected by peers in school, and finally, “financial resources” measures the perceived quality of the financial resources14,15.
The questionnaire’s internal consistency values (Cronbach’s alpha) range between 0.76 (for social acceptance) and 0.89 (for financial support) on the different dimensions. It is scored as Rasch scales and translated into T-values; means and standard deviations were calculated. Higher means are indicative of higher QoL15.
The study complies with the Declaration of Helsinki and it was approved by the Ethics Committee of the hospital. Informed consent was obtained by patients, patients’ parents, and controls before the interview. Each child answered the questionnaire by himself. The questionnaire was taken from the patients during a hospital appointment. In nine cases, the patient was unable to visit the hospital due to their actual location and the interview was taken by phone. The interview was performed by the same interviewer and in the same manner each time, caring for the fully understanding of the questions. The questionnaire for the controls was taken at school.
Statistical analysis and proprietary software
Descriptive data are presented as mean ± standard deviation. The KIDSCREEN-52 instrument was analyzed according to its manual15. Statistical analysis was performed with IBM SPSS Statistics version 23. Means and standard deviations were calculated for each dimension for each group. Group comparisons were performed with the parametric Student’s t-test. p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Graphical analysis was done with the software GraphPad Prism version 5.
Results
Patients’ demographics
Out of 40 patients interviewed, 60% were female (n = 24) and 40% were male (n = 16) with a mean age of 11.6 years. Twenty-two patients were at the age between 8 and 11 years and 18 patients were at the age between 12 and 18 years. Before the procedures, 28 patients had acyanotic heart defects and 12 patients had cyanotic heart defects, respectively (Table 1), but cyanosis was corrected in all cases after the surgery. The most frequent diagnosis was ventricular septal defect (30%) followed by patent ductus arteriosus (17.5%). All diagnoses are shown in Table 2.
Table 1 Demographics of the patients
n | % | |
---|---|---|
8-11 years of age | 22 | 55 |
12-18 years of age | 18 | 45 |
Comorbidities | 9 | 23 |
Acyanotic CHD | 28 | 70 |
Cyanotic CHD | 12 | 30 |
Corrective procedure | 39 | 98 |
Palliative procedure | 1 | 2 |
Underwent surgery with CPB | 29 | 73 |
No CPB | 11 | 27 |
Previous procedures | 10 | 25 |
No previous procedures | 30 | 75 |
Reinterventions | 7 | 18 |
No reinterventions | 33 | 82 |
RACHS-1 | 13 | 32 |
RACHS-2 | 23 | 58 |
RACHS-3 | 4 | 10 |
CHD: congenital heart defect; CPB: cardiopulmonary bypass; RACHS: Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery.
Table 2 Anatomical diagnosis of the patient group (n = 40)
Congenital heart defect | n | % |
---|---|---|
Ventricular septal defect | 12 | 30 |
Patent ductus arteriosus | 7 | 17.5 |
Tetralogy of fallot | 5 | 12.5 |
Atrial septal defect | 3 | 7.5 |
Anomalous pulmonary venous connection | 3 | 7.5 |
Aortic coarctation | 2 | 5 |
Subpulmonary valve stenosis | 1 | 2.5 |
Aortic coarctation associated with ventricular septal defect | 1 | 2.5 |
Atrioventricular septal defect | 1 | 2.5 |
Complex cyanotic heart defect | 1 | 2.5 |
Double outlet right ventricle | 1 | 2.5 |
Aortopulmonary window | 1 | 2.5 |
Pulmonary valve stenosis | 1 | 2.5 |
Double chambered right ventricle | 1 | 2.5 |
Thirty-nine patients underwent corrective surgery (in 29 patients, a cardiopulmonary bypass was needed, with 99.7 ± 50.5 min of cardiopulmonary bypass time and 61.7 ± 35.6 min of aortic cross-clamp time). Only one patient underwent a palliative surgery consisting of a systemic to pulmonary shunt that was considered a definitive surgery, due to the complexity of the heart defect. The mean time interval from the surgery to the interview was 9.83 ± 3 years. Eight patients had a palliative procedure before the corrective surgery (pulmonary artery banding in all of them) and two patients had a two-step corrective surgery. Patients were graded according to the severity of the procedure using the Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery (RACHS) scale: Thirteen patients in category 1, 23 patients in category 2, and 4 patients in category 3. Seven patients needed a procedure after the corrective surgery, due to sequelae or complications (such as diaphragmatic paralysis, arrhythmia ablation, or subglottic stenosis). All patients were classified in category I according to the New York Heart Association functional class scale.
Comparison of patients and controls
Only one patient did not rank the school environment dimension because he did not attend school. Regardless of age and gender, patients scored higher than controls in all dimensions except for financial resources and social acceptance. The difference was largest in moods and emotions, autonomy, and parent relations (Fig. 1).

Figure 1 Congenital heart defect (CHD) group versus healthy control group. Comparison of means ranking quality of life in patients with CHD (n = 40) and in healthy controls (n = 80). All dimensions were statistically significant (p < 0.001).
When comparing male patients with controls and female patients with controls, there was a tendency for a more positive rating in the male patient group in all dimensions. In contrast, female patients outranked female controls only in the dimensions of psychological well-being, moods and emotions, self-perception, autonomy, and parent relations.
Child (8-11 years) and adolescent (12-18 years) CHD patients scored higher in the moods and emotions, self-perception, autonomy, and parent relations, but scored lower in the social support and social acceptance dimensions. In the remaining dimensions, patients scored higher than controls when they were at the age of 12 years and older.
All comparisons were statistically significant (p < 0.0001).
Comparison of subgroups of patients
COMORBIDITIES
Nine patients had comorbidities: Four patients had a genetic syndrome (without associated cognitive impairment), two patients had hemifacial microsomia syndrome, one patient had Noonan syndrome, and one patient had an orofaciodigital syndrome. Two patients had asthma, one patient had congenital scoliosis, one patient had a post-intubation subglottic stenosis, and one patient had a speech sound disorder.
There were no significant differences between patients with and without comorbidities in any of the health-related QoL dimensions studied.
ACYANOTIC VERSUS CYANOTIC HEART DEFECTS
Patients with cyanotic defects reported higher QoL for the dimensions of physical well-being, mood and emotions, autonomy and financial resources; meanwhile, patients with acyanotic defects reported higher QoL for psychological well-being and school environment (mean 55.69 vs. 57.02 in cyanotic vs. acyanotic, respectively, p = 0.02). In the other health-related QoL dimensions, scores were similar (Fig. 2).
USE OF CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS
There were no significant differences in any health-related QoL dimension when comparing patients who underwent cardiopulmonary bypass with those who did not (Fig. 3).
PROCEDURES BEFORE AND AFTER THE CORRECTIVE SURGERY
Patients without surgery before the corrective procedure reported higher QoL in the physical well-being dimension and in the autonomy dimension. The difference in the autonomy dimension is statistically significant (mean 57.84 vs. 52.82, p = 0.01).
Patients who received CHD repair following a two-stage surgery or having procedures and reinterventions after the corrective surgery rated higher in almost all dimensions, in particular, the dimensions of psychological well-being, self-perception, autonomy, parent relations, and school environment. They only rated lower for the dimensions of social support and social acceptance (p = 0.07) when compared to patients without reinterventions (Figs. 4 and 5).
SEVERITY OF THE PROCEDURE
When classifying patients according to the severity of the procedure and comparing each category with their paired control group, higher scores were obtained in the patient group in 8 out of 10 dimensions investigated. For the RACHS 1 and 2 categories, there were lower scores in the social acceptance dimension. For the RACHS 2, there was a lower score in the physical well-being dimension, and for the RACHS 3 category, a lower score was obtained in the moods and emotions and social support dimensions.
The only differences statistically significant were found in the category 2 in the dimensions of autonomy (p = 0.0002) and in parent relations (p = 0.0081), whereas in category 3, it was found in the dimension of moods and emotions (p = 0.02).
Discussion
The results in the present study show that the self-reported QoL of children with CHD aged from 8 to 18 years was higher in almost all dimensions compared to their healthy controls. This finding is consistent with other studies, such as the one conducted by Reiner et al., who found that children and adolescents with CHD had a higher QoL compared to the healthy controls, without differences in the diagnostic subgroups and severity classes16. Teixeira also found this in adolescents and young adults, with higher values of QoL in the environmental and social relationship scale17. In addition, a study by Bertoletti et al.18 presents higher QoL in CHD when compared with the standard population.
The results obtained in our study could be influenced by the self-reported nature of the questionnaire and explained by the hypothesis of sense of coherence, which initially explained why some people undergoing a high level of stress become ill, and others remain healthy. Moons et al. used the term of sense of coherence to understand how patients with chronic diseases cope with their disease and are satisfied with their lives19.
A lower score in the financial resources dimension was found in the studied population, and it may reflect the low socioeconomic status of the sample population and their families since they are without a formal job and social security. It is a finding consistent in other studies, Amedro et al. found in his series that the parents tend to be unemployed and instead dedicate to the caretaking of their child20. Our patients, however, have developed coping strategies since very early stages of their life, which may explain the higher scores obtained in the dimensions of autonomy and parent relations, such coping strategies may be understood as resilience, a positive adaptive process from an individual in the context of extreme adversity, which is why patients with CHD have high levels of action in some dimensions of QoL despite facing adverse life conditions18.
A Brazilian study conducted on 203 adolescents with CHD using the KIDSCREEN-27 questionnaire found no statistically significant difference between acyanotic and cyanotic groups, as well as for the different diagnostic subgroups. This is in accordance with our results, although one should note the small numbers and heterogeneity of our subgroups, and possible confounding factors should be considered16.
Related to the differences in age and sex, our study reported higher scores in all dimensions in patients older than 12 years, a finding contrary to the general population, where QoL declines with age, possibly due to the emotional and psychological adjustment. When CHD patients begin the adolescence, they may maintain a higher self-perception of QoL arising from the resilience concept explained before13,16,18.
A multilevel analysis in European children, conducted by Bisegger et al., showed that the decrease with aging in self-perception of QoL is more pronounced in females than males21. We reported in our patients higher scores in all dimensions in the male group when compared to their healthy control group.
A previous multicenter study in Europe evaluated QoL in patients with CHD and healthy controls, using the KIDSCREEN-52 questionnaire, revealing that physical well-being was lower for patients, influenced mainly by the severity of the disease adducing this to the stigma over CHD. Two other dimensions were lower in patients (financial resources and social support), a finding consistent with our own study. In a multivariate analysis, the dimension of autonomy was also lower than the control group, which could be explained because of overprotective parents.
When evaluating parents’ reports on their perceived children’s QoL, more dimensions were altered (school environment and psychological well-being)20.
When the RACHS scale was included in the analysis, higher scores in the three categories are consistent in the autonomy and moods and emotions dimensions, this emphasizes the idea that physical limitations are neither the only nor the most important factor for the health-related QoL, especially if coping styles, resilience and sense of coherence are well established. The impact of the type of heart defect and surgical procedure on the QoL has been evaluated, with variable results. Heush et al. found a trend toward lower scores in patients with univentricular physiology or after a Mustard procedure; however, they conclude that the surgical technique does not influence on the self-reported QoL22. On the other hand, Heye et al. compared QoL from patients with a single ventricle and those after a biventricular repair, finding a similar QoL in both groups23.
Conclusions
We conclude that the self-perception of QoL in post-operative patients for CHD is similar and in certain dimensions higher than the healthy population. Higher complexity studies that include psychosocial variables and parental perception are required. QoL is a subjective concept, and cultural differences from one region to another impact in the results obtained, research on this matter must be encouraged in every center that manages CHD. A better understanding of the QoL determinants will improve the attention provided to the patient and their families.
This is the first study of its kind in our country, and one of the few in developing countries addressing QoL after heart surgery. To the best of our knowledge, it is the third study that uses the KIDSCREEN questionnaire to evaluate QoL in CHD. No complete psychometric studies were performed. The small size of our sample is due to socioeconomic conditions of the patients attended in our hospital, making it hard to ensure a late follow-up. This also impacts on the small representativeness of the overall population in Mexico with CHD. Conducting studies in various centers of the country will allow for a better understanding of the QoL in general after heart surgery for CHDs in a developing country such as our own. Further studies with bigger samples, more variable heart diseases and a closer follow-up are required in our country. The type of survey-based research performed also implies a social desirability bias, which must be considered.