DATA in BRIEF of: Interventional Cardiac Catheterization in Neonatal Age: Results in a Multi-centre Italian Experience
Mario Giordano,
Giuseppe Santoro,
Gabriella Agnoletti,
Mario Carminati,
Andrea Donti,
Paolo Guccione,
Maurizio Marasini,
Ornella Milanesi,
Biagio Castaldi,
Martino Cheli,
Roberto Formigari,
Gianpiero Gaio,
Luca Giugno,
Alessia Lunardini,
Carlotta Pepino,
Maria Giovanna Russo,
Isabella Spadoni
Affiliations
Mario Giordano
Pediatric Cardiology, “Ospedali dei Colli”, University of Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli”, Naples
Giuseppe Santoro
Pediatric Cardiology, “Ospedali dei Colli”, University of Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli”, Naples; Pediatric Cardiology and GUCH Unit, “Ospedale del Cuore”, Tuscany-CNR Foundation “G. Monasterio”, Massa; Corresponding author: Giuseppe Santoro, MD, Via Camillo Sorgente, 31, 84125 - Salerno, ITALY, Phone/Fax +39-0585-383634.
Gabriella Agnoletti
Pediatric Cardiology, “Regina Margherita” Hospital, University of Turin
Mario Carminati
Pediatric Cardiology and GUCH Unit, IRCCS Policlinico San Donato, Milan
Andrea Donti
Pediatric Cardiology and GUCH Unit, “S. Orsola-Malpighi” Hospital, University of Bologna
A comprehensive description of morbidity and mortality as well as risk factors of interventional cardiac catheterization performed in neonatal age was reported in our paper recently published on the International Journal of Cardiology (IJCA28502; PII: S0167-5273(20)30384-3; DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2020.04.013). Eight Italian high-volume centres of Paediatric Cardiology were involved in this observational, retrospective data collection and analysis. In this dataset, clinical and procedural characteristics of 1423 newborns submitted to 1551 interventional cardiac catheterization procedures were analyzed. Primary outcomes were considered procedure and in-hospital mortality as well as major adverse event and procedural failure rates. Secondary outcomes were considered minor adverse events and need for blood transfusion. Targets of this data analysis were: 1) to evaluate the overall major risk factors of interventional cardiac catheterization; 2) to identify the most hazardous interventional procedures; 3) to assess possible trends of individual procedures as well as their outcome over time; 4) to find possible relationships between the volume activity of any centre and the procedure and follow-up outcome. In particular, this Data in Brief companion paper aims to report the specific statistic highlights of the multivariable analysis (binary logistic regression) used to assess the impact of any potential risk factors on the type of procedure over a short-term follow-up.