Birth prevalence of congenital heart disease worldwide.. This review included 114 papers and identified 164,396 cases of congenital heart disease.. Prevalence of congenital heart defects
Trang 1future.
Trang 2Van der Linde D, Konings EE, Slager MA, et al Birth prevalence of congenital heart disease
worldwide A systematic review and meta-analysis J Am Coll Cardiol 2011;58:2241–
2247
This review included 114 papers and identified
164,396 cases of congenital heart disease.
Overall the prevalence increased over time from the 1930s to the 1990s but remained stable
since Asia had the highest prevalence Observed geographic differences may also be of genetic, environmental, socioeconomical, or ethnic origin
Reller MD, Strickland MJ, Riehle-Colarusso T, et
al Prevalence of congenital heart defects in
metropolitan Atlanta, 1998–2005 J Pediatr.
2008;153:807–813
This study looked at the prevalence of CHD among all deliveries in the metropolitan Atlanta area in the United States between 1998 and 2005 The study identified a prevalence of CHD of 8 in
1000 Many common CHD were associated with older maternal age and multiple-gestation
pregnancy.
Trang 3Gilboa SM, Devine OJ, Kucik JE Congenital heart defects in the United States: estimating the
magnitude of the affected population in 2010
Circulation 2016;134(2):101–109.
This study used the prevalence data of CHDs in Quebec, Canada, to estimate the prevalence of CHD in the United States in 2010 based on a race-ethnicity adjustment factor The study
estimated that approximately 2.4 million people (1.4 million adults, 1 million children) were
living with CHD in the United States in 2010 Nearly 300,000 of these individuals had severe CHD The study suggested a growing population
of adults with CHD in the United States.
Hoffman JI, Kaplan S The incidence of congenital
heart disease J Am Coll Cardiol 2002;39:1890–
1900
This comprehensive review of 62 published studies
of estimated prevalence noted great variability
in reported estimates, much of which was
explained by methodologic aspects and
increasing ascertainment with echocardiography
of ventricular septal defects.
Hoffman JI, Kaplan S, Liberthson RR Prevalence
of congenital heart disease Am Heart J.
2004;147:425–439
The point prevalence defines the total number of