A three-year-old girl was admitted to our clinic with complaints of respiratory distress and dyspnea. Her medical history revealed a total surgical correction due to type 1 truncus arteriosus in the neonatal period in an external center with a 14 mm pulmonary homograft for the right ventricle-pulmonary artery continuity. One year after the initial operation, the patient underwent redo surgery for severe pulmonary valve stenosis and left pulmonary artery stenosis related to homograft degeneration. The left pulmonary artery was repaired using a pericardial xenograft patch and the right ventricle-pulmonary artery continuity was maintained using a 17 mm aortic homograft. Chest X-ray showed diffuse calcification of the pulmonary conus (Figure 1a). Echocardiography revealed a peak systolic gradient of 80 mmHg at the pulmonary valve level with Grad 3 pulmonary valve regurgitation. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography for further evaluation demonstrated an aneurysmal dilatation of the RVOT, diffuse and tubular calcification of the homograft, and severe stenosis of the pulmonary bifurcation (near-complete stenosis of the left pulmonary artery outflow tract (Figure 1b-d). No metabolic or renal pathology promoting calcification was observed. Based on these findings, the patient was scheduled for surgery. A written informed consent was obtained from each parent. The calcified homograft and the RVOT aneurysm were excised (Figure 2a) and the left pulmonary artery stenosis was treated with a pericardial patch. A 14 mm bovine jugular vein valved conduit (Contegra®, Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA), compatible with the pulmonary artery size of the patient, was placed into the repaired bifurcation (Figure 2b). The postoperative period was uneventful, and the patient was discharged in the postoperative fifth day with full recovery.
In conclusion, although early homograft conduit degeneration is rare, conduit replacement, particularly in the infancy and early childhood period, may lead to reduced durability of the conduit due to immunological rejection, thereby promoting the progression to conduit failure. Hence, severe and en bloc calcifications should be surgically treated in patients with the diagnosis of conduit failure.
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