Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T07:01:57.993Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The European Paediatric Cardiac Code Long List: structure and function — the first revision

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 July 2009

Rodney C. G. Franklin*
Affiliation:
Paediatric Cardiologist, Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust, London, UK
*
Correspondence to: Dr Rodney C. G. Franklin, Paediatric Cardiologist, Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust, Harefield, Middlesex UB9 6JH, UK.

Extract

The Long List

The Long List is a comprehensive hierarchical system of coding and classification for the diagnosis and treatment of cardiac disease. The list was first published in 2000, as part of the standard coding system recommended by the Association for European Paediatric Cardiology for use across Europe. It embraces the entirety of the diagnosis and therapy of children with congenital and acquired cardiac disease. The Long List, as a whole, was adopted by the Association in 1998. Its development and expansion has been detailed previously. In essence, it grew from a list of 507 purely diagnostic terms published in 1985, through to a 1,777 item, hierarchical 12 tree structure in the Netherlands by 1988, and then to a single hierarchical structure of over 4,300 items in London by 1994. Although originally aimed at the clinician or surgeon treating cardiac disease first appearing in infancy or childhood, during this time it was enlarged to encompass abnormalities first diagnosed in fetal life, as well as cardiac disease first acquired during adult life. The list published in 2000 was composed of 4,777 items. These were made up of 3,906 individual terms, most of whom were mutually exclusive and unambivalent, given the constraints of clinical ambiguities and differing cultures of practice.

Type
The European Paediatric Cardiac Code: The First Revision
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Association for European Paediatric Cardiology. The European Paediatric Cardiac Code. The Long List with crossmaps to the 9th and 10th revisions of the International Classification of Disease. Cardiol Young 2000; 10 (Suppl. 1): 34146.Google Scholar
2.Miller, GAH, Anderson, RH, Rigby, ML. The diagnosis of congenital heart disease; incorporating the Brompton Hospital Diagnostic Code. Tunbridge Wells: Castle House, 1985; 110120.Google Scholar
3.Franklin, RCG, Anderson, RH, Daniëls, O, et al. The European Paediatric Cardiac Code. Cardiol Young 1999; 9: 633657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4.Franklin, RCG, Anderson, RH, Daniëls, O, et al. The European Paediatric Cardiac Code — the first revision. Cardiol Young 2002; 12 (Suppl. 2): 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5.Van, Praagh R.The segmental approach to diagnosis in congenital heart disease. Birth Defects 1972; 8: 423.Google Scholar
6.Shinebourne, EA, Macartney, FJ, Anderson, RH. Sequential chamber localisation: the logical approach to diagnosis in congenital heart disease. Br Heart J 1976; 38: 327340.Google Scholar
7.Anderson, RH. Terminology. In: Anderson, RH, Baker, EJ, Macartney, FJ, Rigby, ML, Shinebourne, EA, Tynan, M (eds). Paediarric Cardiology Volume 1. London: Churchill Livingstone 2002; Chap 2: 1936.Google Scholar
8.Anderson, RH.How should we optimally describe complex congenitally malformed hearts? Annals of Thoracic Surgery 1996; 62: 710716.Google Scholar
9.Van, Praagh R, Plett, JA, Van, Praagh S.Single ventricle. Pathology, embryology, terminology and classification. Herz 1979; 4: 113150.Google Scholar
10.Rao, PS. Classification of tricuspid atresia. In: Rao, PS (ed). Tricuspid Atresia (2nd Ed). New York: Futura Publishing Company, 1992; 5979.Google Scholar
11.Gittenberger-de, Groot AC, Sauer, U, Oppenheimer-Dekker, A, Quaegebeur, J. Coronary arterial anatomy in transposition of the great arteries: a morphological study. Pediatr Cardiol 1983; 4 (Suppl. 1): 1524.Google Scholar