Current Environment: Production

Warning

An important message to our patients and their caregivers.

We are here for you. Read more

Time is critical in the treatment of infants who are born with a serious congenital heart defect (CHD). When a child has surgery to repair CHD not long after birth, they quickly benefit from improved cardiac physiology and have a better chance of maturing and leading a healthy, full life.

The neonatal cardiac surgery team at the Benderson Family Heart Center is comprised of a group of specialists across several disciplines. We work together to plan and carry out the best course of treatment for any one of the 30 types of CHD. Our team is committed to providing comprehensive specialized care so your family can start enjoying time with your child.

Why choose neonatal cardiac surgery at Boston Children’s?

About one out of 100 children is born with a CHD, a structural heart problem that develops during pregnancy. If your child has a CHD — whether it’s an uncomplicated type that needs only minimal surgical treatment or a complex type that requires surgery shortly after birth — we aim to give you and your baby the best possible care.

Our team draws on decades of collective experience to reach a diagnosis and devise an appropriate treatment plan for the CHD and any possible related conditions, including hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) and transposition of the great arteries (TGA).

Supporting you and your child from birth to adulthood

Our goal is to provide continuity of care for you and your child — even as early as before birth. We work closely with our colleagues at the Fetal Care and Surgery Center and the Fetal Cardiology Program to provide screening and care for mothers whose babies have been diagnosed, in utero, with cardiac conditions.

We also collaborate with other hospitals so that treatment can begin in earnest after you deliver and arrive at Boston Children’s. Our experience in treating CHD during the neonatal period helps us aim for not only the best short-term outcomes for your baby, but it also establishes long-term outcomes that will benefit your child into adulthood.

Fetal cardiac surgery consultations at Boston Children’s

If your baby requires surgical intervention after delivery, our cardiac surgeons, advanced practice providers, and care coordinators are here to support you and your child during the fetal stage, inpatient stay, and post-operatively.

If you would like to schedule a consultation with the cardiac surgery team, please contact Jacqui Gover at 617-355-1522 or jacqueline.gover@cardio.chboston.org.

Baby sits on chair and stares directly into the camera.

After complex heart surgery, baby Yah’ir is all smiles

When a fetal echocardiogram showed that Yah'ir would be born with an atrioventricular (AV) canal defect, a team consisting of cardiac surgeons, cardiologists, maternal-fetal medicine specialists, and nurses came together to care for him.

Collaborative care for newborns with congenital heart disease

We first assess your child to determine the best timing for surgery. Some children need surgery immediately; others first need their hearts to mature before an operation, so we will instead use catheters and stents as a temporary step.

When your child is ready for surgery, they will benefit from our mission to collaborate and seek the best way to treat CHD. Those surgical treatment plans are made with careful consideration by our neonatal cardiac care team. Comprised of neonatal cardiac surgeons, your family’s primary cardiologist, interventional cardiologists, anesthesiologists, and attending specialists from the hospital’s Cardiac Intensive Care Unit (CICU), the team meets frequently to review your child’s health and map out the most appropriate treatment strategy.

Nutritionists, medical engineers, and other specialists are also collaborating with our team to ensure your child has the best care. Here is a look at their programs:

  • Cardiac Intensive Care Unit: The 48-bed CICU cares for patients who just had cardiac surgery or who need non-surgical treatment for acquired and congenital heart disease. CICU clinicians closely monitor patients and provide family-centered care.
  • Cardiac Neurodevelopmental Program: This program complements children’s core medical care by monitoring their development and learning and proactively connecting them to resources that can help them meet their developmental and personal goals.
  • Cardiovascular 3D Modeling and Simulation Program: Engineers create 3D models and perform detailed analyses of a patient’s heart anatomy to help cardiac surgeons and cardiologists create intricate surgery plans.
  • Inpatient Cardiology's Acute Cardiac Care Unit: The ACCU provides around-the-clock acute care of heart patients.
  • PEdiatric CArdiac Nutrition (PECAN) Program: The experts of this program aim to improve outcomes in heart patients by fostering healthy nutrition. They closely monitor growth and make nutritional recommendations to help children get strong enough for surgery and ensure their maturation continues after treatment.
  • Home Monitoring Program: The program ensures that families of newborns with high-risk heart conditions, as well as those who have been diagnosed with a condition but show no symptoms, have the tools and support they need at home as they care for their child, whether it’s before the child’s first surgery or in the period between surgeries.

The many specialists caring for your child constantly ask one another: “What kind of surgery is needed?” “Can we consider non-surgical treatments to prepare for surgery or maybe even use in place of surgery?” Also, before and after surgery, we coordinate with the Cardiac Neurodevelopment Program to include the diagnosis and treatment of neurodevelopmental conditions in treatment plans for patients who are potentially at risk.

Neonatal surgery can be complex and difficult. That’s why every neonatal operation at Boston Children’s involves a team of experienced anesthesiologists and at least two neonatal cardiac surgeons. We consistently see better outcomes for patients when more than one set of experienced eyes and hands repair a CHD. Our experience and belief in collaboration allow us to constantly improve surgical treatment so that you and your child can safely get on a path to recovery.

Our cardiac surgeons partner with cardiologists, nurses, and other specialists in the Fetal Cardiology Program to deliver personalized care for you and your infant before and after birth.

Outstanding outcomes

Our Department of Cardiac Surgery team collaborates with colleagues across disciplines to deliver the best care for your newborn — and we have some of the best success rates. (Data are taken from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Congenital Heart Surgery Database.)

 

Four-year survival

Over a four-year span, we have better neonatal survival rates for higher complexity cases than STS national benchmarks.

Date for surgery performed: January 2020 to December 2023
Source: Spring 2024 STS report

Four-year length of stay

Over a four-year span, we have shorter hospital length of stays by case complexity when compared with STS national benchmarks. Note: This data is the median for all cases, not specific to neonatal cases.

Date for surgery performed: January 2020 to December 2023
Source: Spring 2024 STS report

Four-year case volume comparison

Over a four-year span, we have significantly higher neonatal case volumes by case complexity than those in the STS national database.

Date for surgery performed: January 2020 to December 2023
Source: Spring 2024 STS report
*: Total STS eligible cases divided by 113 participants