Background
The effectiveness of fetal echocardiography in reducing the mortality from congenital heart disease (CHD) is largely unknown.
Objectives
This study aimed to evaluate whether the widespread use of fetal echocardiography owing to the initiation of insurance coverage in Japan was associated with a decreasing trend in the annual number of CHD‐related deaths.
Methods
Data regarding the number of deaths from CHD in infants aged <12 months were extracted from Japanese demographic statistics (2000–2018). Segmented regression analysis was performed on the interrupted time series data by stratifying the sample into CHD subgroups based on ICD‐10 classification and sex.
Results
After the initiation of insurance coverage for fetal echocardiography in 2010, a decrease was observed in the trends of annual deaths in patients with congenital malformations of aortic and mitral valves (ratio of trends before and after the initiation of insurance coverage for fetal echocardiography 0.96, 95% confidence interval 0.93, 0.99). In this group, the decrease persisted after adjusting for annual total infant deaths and cardiac surgery mortality and in the analysis of trends in the proportion of deaths in this group per total CHD deaths. However, a decrease in trends was not observed in other patient groups with CHD. In the sex‐stratified analysis, a decrease was noted only in male patients with congenital malformations of aortic and mitral valves.
Conclusions
The nationwide trend in annual CHD deaths decreased after the initiation of insurance coverage for fetal echocardiography only among patients with congenital malformation of aortic and mitral valves. These findings suggest that prenatal diagnosis with fetal echocardiography has led to improved mortality outcomes among these patients in Japan.