Genetics and Brain Health in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease: A Consensus Statement From the ACHD/Neuro 2024 Conference.

Field, T. S., Morton, S. U., Brossard-Racine, M., Cohen, S., Feldman, H. H., Chung, A. W., Newburger, J. W., Puder, R., Gurvitz, M., & Cassidy, A. R. (2026). Genetics and Brain Health in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease: A Consensus Statement From the ACHD/Neuro 2024 Conference.. Journal of the American Heart Association, e042617.

Abstract

With improvement in medical and surgical care, the number of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) is soaring. Adults with CHD commonly have impairments in brain health. However, significant gaps in knowledge remain regarding the relevant types and prevalence of neurologic and psychiatric risk and their associated risk factors. We sought to review current evidence, identify gaps in knowledge, and develop key next steps to improve scientific understanding and clinical care. Three working groups-Genetics and Brain Health, Characterizing Neuropsychological and Psychological Outcomes, and Neuropsychological and Psychosocial Interventions-were composed of multidisciplinary experts in relevant clinical and research domains, as well as adults with CHD. Each group identified 5 key knowledge gaps and associated next investigations needed to address those gaps. For Genetics and Brain Health, 5 key knowledge gaps were identified: lack of a standardized neuroimaging protocol for adults with CHD, need to understand neuroradiological-pathological-neuropsychological correlates, role of gene-environment interactions, what can be learned from brain health risk models from other groups, and how existing multimodal approaches influence risk and neuroresilience. Adults with CHD can benefit from routine assessment of brain health, as well as increased clinical and basic research into the underlying factors that contribute to risk and neuroresilience for neurologic and psychiatric sequalae. Multidisciplinary collaborative efforts that incorporate adults with CHD across the research cycle are essential for all key next steps.

Last updated on 01/20/2026
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