PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study examines prediction of surgical risk in growing population of adults with congenital heart disease

2026-01-31
(Press-News.org)

Study Examines Prediction of Surgical Risk
in Growing Population of Adults with Congenital Heart Disease

NEW ORLEANS — January 31, 2026 — Heart specialists at Mayo Clinic today presented new research at the 2026 Society of Thoracic Surgeons Annual Meeting that redo surgery for adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) remains high-risk, and a clinically applicable national risk assessment model is needed to help patients and care teams make decisions about procedures.

Adults with CHD represent a growing and medically complex population, despite surgical advances. Most were born with structural heart defects and underwent surgery early in life; many now require additional procedures as adults. Their prior operations, changing physiology, and long-term health challenges make it difficult for surgeons and patients to estimate operative risk using current tools designed for the broader adult cardiac population.

The study, led by Elaine Griffeth, MD, a resident in the combined general and thoracic surgery program at Mayo Clinic, analyzes cases in the STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database (ACSD) covering July 2017 through December 2023. Researchers used their previous work on clinical data from Mayo Clinic with machine-learning analysis and logistic regression to help determine surgical risk on a national level.

Researchers found that 16.7% of adults nationwide with CHD were considered high-risk for operative mortality and serious postoperative complications after redo cardiac surgery, including the need for mechanical circulatory support, dialysis, and risks for stroke, neurologic injury, or cardiac arrest.

“Many patients with congenital heart disease will need surgery as adults. Our work shows that the overall risk of post-surgical complications is prevalent, but patients need to know their individual risk based on their individual medical circumstances. We are setting the stage to create a reliable resource for this emerging patient population," Dr. Griffeth said.

The research identified 15 factors as the most influential in predicting postoperative risk, and a predictive model generated using those factors showed good discrimination. The results of this study demonstrate that it is feasible to generate clinically applicable risk models in adult CHD care, and integrating machine-learning with traditional statistical methods offers a practical path forward.

Patients with isolated bicuspid aortic valve diagnoses, undergoing their first cardiac operation, or undergoing heart transplantation or isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were excluded from the study to focus the analysis on conditions more typical of adult CHD surgical care.

“This is a work in progress,” she added. “We want to have high reliability in the surgeries we are offering, and we are trying to tailor this model with data from past patients. The more informed patients are about their risks for surgery, the better.”

One challenge of CHD care, Dr. Griffeth added, is that some adults have one ventricle—making single-ventricle status an important marker for long-term risk. However, single-ventricle status is not frequently captured in the ACSD. Therefore, researchers utilized similar analytical techniques tailored to the ACSD to develop a risk model that represents the national cohort of adults with CHD.

Dr. Griffeth noted that patient outcomes depend on the entire surgical team and that, “risk factors identified at one institution do not always translate well across all institutions. The ACSD data allows us to identify important risk factors for surgical outcomes across all hospitals to develop this model.”

Thanks to innovative cardiac surgical advances, almost all children born with CHD now live into adulthood, underscoring the need for a risk prediction tool for this growing population. CHDs are the most common birth defect, and an estimated 1.4 million adults in the U.S. have heart defects that were first treated in childhood.1

This work will ultimately contribute to the creation of a surgical risk calculator for adults with CHD. These risk models and calculators are another way STS is bringing evidence-based guidance to patients with different types of cardiovascular disease and their surgeons.

The STS has already developed many procedure-specific surgical risk calculators that harness the power of the STS National Database™ to better inform patients and surgeons when making clinical decisions about adult cardiac surgery for non-CHD patients. The STS Database is one of the world’s largest and most comprehensive clinical registries, with data on nearly 10 million procedures from more than 4,300 surgeons, including 95% of adult cardiac surgery procedures.

About The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons is a not-for-profit organization representing more than 8,000 surgeons, researchers, and allied healthcare professionals worldwide who are committed to improving outcomes for patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery.

                                                                     

#####

1 Data and Statistics | Congenital Heart Defects (CHDs) | CDC

                                                       

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Novel radiation therapy QA method: Monte Carlo simulation meets deep learning for fast, accurate epid transmission dose generation

2026-01-31
Bridging Speed and Accuracy in Radiation Therapy QA Led by Professor Fu Jin, the study addresses a critical challenge in radiation therapy: balancing the computational speed and accuracy of EPID-based dose verification. EPID has emerged as a key tool for real-time in vivo dose verification. However, MC simulation—long regarded as the "gold standard" for dose calculation—faces a dilemma: increasing the number of simulated particles ensures higher accuracy but at the cost of significantly longer computation times, whereas reducing the particle count introduces disruptive noise that compromises result reliability. Integrated MC-DL Technology To address this challenge, the ...

A 100-fold leap into the unknown: a new search for muonium conversion into antimuonium

2026-01-31
Exploring Lepton Flavor Violation Led by researchers from Sun Yat-sen University, the Institute of Modern Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and multiple collaborating institutions across China, MACE is designed to search for the spontaneous conversion of muonium—a bound state of a positive muon and an electron—into its antimatter counterpart, antimuonium. Such a transition would violate lepton flavor conservation, a symmetry upheld by the Standard Model of particle physics, ...

A new approach to chiral α-amino acid synthesis - photo-driven nitrogen heterocyclic carbene catalyzed highly enantioselective radical α-amino esterification

2026-01-30
Professor Jian Wang's research group at Tsinghua University reported a photocatalyzed/nitrogen heterocyclic carbene-catalyzed asymmetric radical α-alkoxycarbonylation reaction of amines. Using dibenzylaniline derivatives and readily available pyrocarbonates as starting materials, chiral α-amino acid esters can be synthesized in one step. Further deprotection reactions yield chiral α-amino acids containing primary, secondary, or tertiary amine groups. This research provides a novel method for obtaining structurally diverse chiral α-amino acid derivatives and has ...

Physics-defying discovery sheds new light on how cells move

2026-01-30
MADISON — The cells in our bodies move in groups during biological processes such as wound healing and tissue development — but because of resistance, or viscosity, those cells can't just neatly glide past each other.   Or can they? Using a pioneering method they developed to directly measure viscosity in a group of cells, University of Wisconsin–Madison engineers have made a surprising discovery that upends understanding of how cells move. It's called "negative viscosity," and it propels cells, rather than impedes ...

Institute for Data Science in Oncology announces new focus-area lead for advancing data science to reduce public cancer burden

2026-01-30
The Institute for Data Science in Oncology (IDSO) at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center today announced the appointment of Iakovos Toumazis, Ph.D., to lead its focused efforts in advancing decision analytics for health. The goal of this new IDSO focus area is to develop, rigorously validate and implement advanced data‑driven analytics frameworks that support optimal decision‑making to enhance patient outcomes, to strengthen value‑based care delivery, and to enable efficient allocation of health ...

Mapping the urban breath

2026-01-30
Cities occupy just a small fraction of Earth's land, but they act as the planet's massive carbon engines, pumping out the lion's share of global CO2 emissions. To stop climate change, we first have to measure it accurately—street by street and chimney by chimney. A comprehensive new review published in Carbon Research takes a deep dive into the sophisticated networks designed to "sniff out" these emissions, highlighting both the technological triumphs and the massive gaps still remaining in our global monitoring net. Leading the charge is Professor Gan Zhang from the State Key Laboratory of Advanced Environmental Technology at the Guangzhou Institute ...

Waste neem seeds become high-performance heat batteries for clean energy storage

2026-01-30
As renewable energy expands worldwide, one challenge remains stubbornly unresolved: how to store heat efficiently and sustainably when the sun is not shining or demand fluctuates. A new study shows that agricultural waste, specifically discarded neem seeds, can be transformed into a powerful and environmentally friendly thermal energy storage material. Researchers have developed a biochar based phase change material that can capture, store, and release heat with high efficiency while also locking carbon away. The work demonstrates how the temperature used to produce biochar strongly ...

Scientists map the “physical genome” of biochar to guide next generation carbon materials

2026-01-30
Biochar, a carbon rich material made by heating biomass under low oxygen conditions, has long been known for its ability to store carbon in soils and improve environmental quality. Now, a new comprehensive review introduces a powerful way to understand and design biochar by mapping what the authors call its “physical genome”, a framework that links biochar’s internal structure to how it performs across a wide range of applications Published online on January 29, 2026, the review brings together decades of research on biochar’s physical properties, including porosity, mechanical strength, ...

Mobile ‘endoscopy on wheels’ brings lifesaving GI care to rural South Africa

2026-01-30
A study led by the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) Global Surgery Program, in partnership with George Regional Hospital in South Africa, reported that a traveling mobile endoscopy team performed more than 500 procedures across five rural hospitals in South Africa’s Western Cape. The study was published in BMJ Open Gastroenterology in December 2025. Between January and November 2024, the team performed procedures on adults at district hospitals where endoscopy is not routinely available. The findings highlighted both the heavy burden of treatable gastrointestinal disease in rural communities and ...

Taming tumor chaos: Brown University Health researchers uncover key to improving glioblastoma treatment

2026-01-30
A groundbreaking study from Brown University Health researchers has identified a crucial factor that may help improve treatment for glioblastoma, one of the most aggressive and common forms of adult brain cancer. The findings, published November 10 in Cell Reports, reveal how differences among cells within a single tumor influence the cancer’s response to chemotherapy, and introduce a promising new therapy designed to tip the odds in the patients’ favor. Glioblastoma is notoriously difficult to treat.  One of the key ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Late-breaking study finds comparable long-term survival between two leading multi-arterial CABG strategies

Lymph node examination should be expanded to accurately assess cancer spread in patients with lung cancer

Study examines prediction of surgical risk in growing population of adults with congenital heart disease

Novel radiation therapy QA method: Monte Carlo simulation meets deep learning for fast, accurate epid transmission dose generation

A 100-fold leap into the unknown: a new search for muonium conversion into antimuonium

A new approach to chiral α-amino acid synthesis - photo-driven nitrogen heterocyclic carbene catalyzed highly enantioselective radical α-amino esterification

Physics-defying discovery sheds new light on how cells move

Institute for Data Science in Oncology announces new focus-area lead for advancing data science to reduce public cancer burden

Mapping the urban breath

Waste neem seeds become high-performance heat batteries for clean energy storage

Scientists map the “physical genome” of biochar to guide next generation carbon materials

Mobile ‘endoscopy on wheels’ brings lifesaving GI care to rural South Africa

Taming tumor chaos: Brown University Health researchers uncover key to improving glioblastoma treatment

Researchers enable microorganisms to build molecules with light

Laws to keep guns away from distressed individuals reduce suicides

Study shows how local business benefits from city services

RNA therapy may be a solution for infant hydrocephalus

Global Virus Network statement on Nipah virus outbreak

A new molecular atlas of tau enables precision diagnostics and drug targeting across neurodegenerative diseases

Trends in US live births by race and ethnicity, 2016-2024

Sex and all-cause mortality in the US, 1999 to 2019

Nasal vaccine combats bird flu infection in rodents

Sepsis study IDs simple ways to save lives in Africa

“Go Red. Shop with Heart.” to save women’s lives and support heart health this February

Korea University College of Medicine successfully concludes the 2025 Lee Jong-Wook Fellowship on Infectious Disease Specialists Program

Girls are happiest at school – for good reasons

Researchers from the University of Maryland School of Medicine discover genetic ancestry is a critical component of assessing head and neck cancerous tumors

Can desert sand be used to build houses and roads?

New species of ladybird beetle discovered on Kyushu University campus

Study identifies alternate path for inflammation that could improve RA treatment

[Press-News.org] Study examines prediction of surgical risk in growing population of adults with congenital heart disease