Enhancing the Classification of Congenital Heart Defects for Outcome Association Studies in Birth Defects Registries

  • Sara B Stephens
  • , Renata H Benjamin
  • , Keila N Lopez
  • , Brett R Anderson
  • , Angela E Lin
  • , Charles J Shumate
  • , Wendy N Nembhard
  • , Shaine A Morris
  • , A. J. Agopian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: Traditional strategies for grouping congenital heart defects (CHDs) using birth defect registry data do not adequately address differences in expected clinical consequences between different combinations of CHDs. We report a lesion-specific classification system for birth defect registry–based outcome studies. Methods: For Core Cardiac Lesion Outcome Classifications (C-CLOC) groups, common CHDs expected to have reasonable clinical homogeneity were defined. Criteria based on combinations of Centers for Disease and Control-modified British Pediatric Association (BPA) codes were defined for each C-CLOC group. To demonstrate proof of concept and retention of reasonable case counts within C-CLOC groups, Texas Birth Defect Registry data (1999–2017 deliveries) were used to compare case counts and neonatal mortality between traditional vs. C-CLOC classification approaches. Results: C-CLOC defined 59 CHD groups among 62,262 infants with CHDs. Classifying cases into the single, mutually exclusive C-CLOC group reflecting the highest complexity CHD present reduced case counts among lower complexity lesions (e.g., 86.5% of cases with a common atrium BPA code were reclassified to a higher complexity group for a co-occurring CHD). As expected, C-CLOC groups had retained larger sample sizes (i.e., representing presumably better-powered analytic groups) compared to cases with only one CHD code and no occurring CHDs. Discussion: This new CHD classification system for investigators using birth defect registry data, C-CLOC, is expected to balance clinical outcome homogeneity in analytic groups while maintaining sufficiently large case counts within categories, thus improving power for CHD-specific outcome association comparisons. Future outcome studies utilizing C-CLOC-based classifications are planned.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2393
JournalBirth Defects Research
Volume116
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • birth defect registry
  • classification
  • congenital anomalies
  • congenital heart defects
  • surveillance programs

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