PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

The Congenital Heart Disease Genetic Network Study: Cohort description.

  • Thanh T Hoang,
  • Elizabeth Goldmuntz,
  • Amy E Roberts,
  • Wendy K Chung,
  • Jennie K Kline,
  • John E Deanfield,
  • Alessandro Giardini,
  • Adolfo Aleman,
  • Bruce D Gelb,
  • Meghan Mac Neal,
  • George A Porter,
  • Richard Kim,
  • Martina Brueckner,
  • Richard P Lifton,
  • Sharon Edman,
  • Stacy Woyciechowski,
  • Laura E Mitchell,
  • A J Agopian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0191319
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. e0191319

Abstract

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The Pediatric Cardiac Genomics Consortium (PCGC) designed the Congenital Heart Disease Genetic Network Study to provide phenotype and genotype data for a large congenital heart defects (CHDs) cohort. This article describes the PCGC cohort, overall and by major types of CHDs (e.g., conotruncal defects) and subtypes of conotrucal heart defects (e.g., tetralogy of Fallot) and left ventricular outflow tract obstructions (e.g., hypoplastic left heart syndrome). Cases with CHDs were recruited through ten sites, 2010-2014. Information on cases (N = 9,727) and their parents was collected through interviews and medical record abstraction. Four case characteristics, eleven parental characteristics, and thirteen parent-reported neurodevelopment outcomes were summarized using counts and frequencies and compared across CHD types and subtypes. Eleven percent of cases had a genetic diagnosis. Among cases without a genetic diagnosis, the majority had conotruncal heart defects (40%) or left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (21%). Across CHD types, there were significant differences (p<0.05) in the distribution of all four case characteristics (e.g., sex), four parental characteristics (e.g., maternal pregestational diabetes), and five neurodevelopmental outcomes (e.g., learning disabilities). Several characteristics (e.g., sex) were also significantly different across CHD subtypes. The PCGC cohort is one of the largest CHD cohorts available for the study of genetic determinants of risk and outcomes. The majority of cases do not have a genetic diagnosis. This description of the PCGC cohort, including differences across CHD types and subtypes, provides a reference work for investigators who are interested in collaborating with or using publically available resources from the PCGC.