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First reported use of drug-eluting bioabsorbable vascular scaffold in congenital heart disease.

The aim of catheter intervention for vascular stenosis is the restoration of lumen area and optimization of distal blood flow. In pediatric practice, this has traditionally been a compromise between less effective balloon angioplasty and bare metal stent insertion with its attendant limitations of size. Bioabsorbable stents offer short-term relief of stenosis, radial support of the healing lesion, return of endothelial function and crucially, in children, the potential for long-term growth. Initial experience, in pediatric practice, with metal-based bioabsorbable stents was relatively disappointing with frequent restenosis secondary to early reabsorption. Design modifications resulting in polymer-based, drug eluting, bioabsorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS) have reportedly overcome some of these faults. We describe the first reported use of a drug eluting BVS in three patients with: (1) A newborn with severe right pulmonary artery (RPA) stensosis post repair of type two common arterial trunk. (2) A child with pulmonary atresia/ventricular septal defect (VSD) and major aorto-pulmonary collateral arteries (MAPCAs), and (3) An infant with severe left pulmonary artery (LPA) stenosis in the setting of an LPA sling.

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