Pediatric Heart Network (PHN)
What is the goal of the PHN?
Through the Pediatric Heart Network (PHN), the NHLBI funds research across a group of hospitals in the United States, Canada, and other countries to accelerate the discovery of new treatments for congenital and pediatric-acquired heart disease. The PHN is the clinical cornerstone of the larger Bench to Bassinet program, a major effort the NHLBI launched to learn more about how the heart develops and why children are born with heart problems.
The goal of the PHN is to improve outcomes and quality of life for individuals with congenital and pediatric-acquired heart disease. Congenital heart defects occur in approximately 40,000 individuals in the United States each year and are a major cause of infant death.
AT A GLANCE
- The PHN is part of the larger Bench to Bassinet program, which seeks to improve outcomes for individuals with pediatric-acquired and congenital heart disease.
- The network consists of several main clinical centers and dozens of additional research centers.
- The PHN has conducted 23 clinical studies and enrolled more than 10,000 participants.
- As survival rates of children with congenital heart defects improve, the PHN has expanded its current research to include adults with congenital heart disease.
- The first nurse-led clinical trial is testing whether a program of passive range of motion in newborns with congenital heart disease, will improve growth.
How does the PHN contribute to scientific discoveries or improved clinical care?
The PHN has helped create better outcomes for children with heart diseases for more than a decade, by addressing particular research challenges. For example, many hospitals and individual doctors do not see enough children with any one type of heart disease to be able to conduct certain studies that would produce meaningful results. In addition, parents have been unable to enroll their children in studies that are available because they are not aware of them, do not live near a research center, or may not feel at ease about what happens during a study. The PHN was established to address these challenges by encouraging collaboration among multiple research teams that specialize in the care of patients with heart disease and patient advocacy groups.
The PHN’s longstanding collaborations positioned it well for pediatric SARS-CoV-2 research early in the COVID-19 pandemic. Leveraging its existing network of sites, PHN launched a study of children and adolescents with multi-system inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C), called MUSIC. The MUSIC study is part of a trans-NIH program, CARING for Children with COVID.
More Information
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Pediatric Heart Network (PHN)
How does the PHN work?
The PHN is a cooperative effort between participating medical centers, a data coordinating center, and the NHLBI. The PHN proposes important research ideas, develops protocols, performs research, monitors patient safety and data, and disseminates the research findings. When studies need more patients than the main centers have, other skilled centers may be trained to conduct one or more of those studies. This helps families across the country have access to a center closer to them.
The studies are conducted with research teams that specialize in the care of patients with heart disease. All of the centers carefully follow a study protocol and treat patients in similar ways so that the study results are accurate. Patient safety is a high priority when a study is being planned and conducted. PHN nurses and doctors have had special training in doing research in ways that help protect patients in a study. They also have had training in how to conduct the specific PHN studies and are experienced with caring for families and their sick children.
FEATURE
As a pediatric cardiologist, Gail Pearson, M.D., Sc.D., faces heart disease where most people least expect to find it—in the very young and most vulnerable. As associate director of the Division of Cardiovascular Sciences at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and director of the Adult and Pediatric Cardiac Research Program, Pearson is able to understand, and affect, the complex world of heart disease from several perspectives.