[Formula: see text] Unraveling the impact of child opportunity and medical factors on neuropsychological outcomes in school-age patients with critical congenital heart disease

[公式:见正文] 揭示儿童发展机会和医疗因素对患有严重先天性心脏病的学龄期患者神经心理结局的影响

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Abstract

We examine the role that medical history and social determinants of health play in predicting school-age intellectual (IQ) and executive functioning (EF) in children with critical congenital heart disease (cCHD). This is a retrospective observational study of 197 patients with cCHD (age 5-18 years) who attended a neuropsychological evaluation through the Cardiac Neurodevelopmental Program. Medical history and social determinants of health (SDOH), measured by the Childhood Opportunity Index (COI 3.0), were obtained via chart review. COI was a significant predictor of school-age IQ and EF. Seizure history and genetic condition were predictors of IQ; inclusion of COI improved the model, predicting an additional 14% of the variance. The Education subdomain of COI, reflecting neighborhood-level educational resources, drove this effect. Aortic obstruction and seizure history were significant predictors of parent-reported EF; inclusion of COI provided modest improvement. Only COI was identified as a predictor of performance-based EF. Social determinants of health are important predictors of school-age functioning in children with cCHD, and efforts to promote positive neurodevelopmental outcomes in this population must consider SDOH. IQ at school-age is related to neighborhood educational resources. This suggests that enhancing educational opportunities in patients with cCHD in lower-resourced communities may promote positive neurodevelopment and reduce disparities.

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