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Hyperoxia During Neonatal Cardiopulmonary Bypass Is Associated With Worse Clinical Outcomes: A Multi-Institutional Study

Title: Hyperoxia During Neonatal Cardiopulmonary Bypass Is Associated With Worse Clinical Outcomes: A Multi-Institutional Study
Authors: Beshish, Asaad G.; Kwiatkowski, David M.; Sznycer-Taub, Nathaniel; Costello, John M.; Jergel, Andrew; Gillespie, Scott; Cashen, Katherine; Asfari, Ahmed; Batsis, Maria; Buckley, Jason R.; Chlebowski, Meghan M.; Flores, Saul; Goldshtrom, Nimrod; Migally, Karl; Mills, Kimberly I.; Radman, Monique R.; Reddy, Chetana; Shutes, Brittany; Riley, Christine M.; Narasimhulu, Sukumar S.; Mueller, Dana; Amula, Venugopal; Venkitachalam, Raji; Joy, Brian F.; Karki, Karan B.; Leopold, Scott M.; Schramm, Jennifer E.; Capone, Christine A.; Aydin, Scott I.; Bakar, Adnan M.; Leong, Kieran; Kulikowska, Agnieszka; Wing, Sarah; Mastropietro, Christopher W.; Collaborative Research from the Pediatric Intensive Care Society (CoRe‐PCICS) Investigators
Contributors: Pediatrics, School of Medicine
Source: PMC
Publisher Information: American Heart Association
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis: IUPUI Scholar Works
Subject Terms: Cardiopulmonary bypass; Heart defects; Congenital; Hospital mortality; Hyperoxia; Infant; Newborn; Oxygen
Description: Background: Exposure to supraphysiologic oxygen concentrations, or hyperoxia, during neonatal cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) has been associated with worse outcomes in single-center studies. We aimed to describe variation in oxygen exposure during CPB and determine if hyperoxia is associated with worse outcomes in a multicenter cohort of neonates undergoing cardiac surgery. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study of neonates who underwent surgery with CPB between January 2021 and December 2022 at 29 centers. Primary outcomes were operative mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events, which included cardiopulmonary resuscitation, extracorporeal support, stroke, and mortality. Logistic regression assessed the associations between median partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (PaO2) during CPB and outcomes in the entire cohort and subset of patients with single-ventricle (SV) anatomy. Results: We analyzed 1175 neonates, including 357 with SV anatomy. Median PaO2 during CPB was 296 mm Hg (range: 54-800), with significant variation across centers (P221 mm Hg was significantly associated with mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events in all patients and patients with SV anatomy. After adjustment for center, associations between hyperoxia and mortality (P=0.053) or major adverse cardiovascular events (P=0.08) were not significant in the entire cohort but remained significant in patients with SV anatomy. Conclusions: We observed significant variation in oxygen exposure during neonatal CPB across centers and significant associations between hyperoxia and worse outcomes, particularly in neonates with SV anatomy.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: Journal of the American Heart Association; https://hdl.handle.net/1805/54604
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/1805/54604
Rights: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International ; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.CED64E05
Database: BASE