Surgical practice is changing and auto-evaluation of quality of care, organized by scientific societies, is very likely to become an obligation during this new decade. This evaluation requires a common nomenclature, a registry, and risk stratification. The primary purpose of risk stratification is to offer the possibility of objective analysis of surgical outcomes according to the complexity of the pathology treated. Registries, databases containing select essential data on a complete population, are not able to produce a statistically reliable risk stratification model. Academic databases, like that of the Congenital Heart Surgeons Society, contain comprehensive data on select patients, and are able to produce risk stratification, but only very slowly. The absence of risk discrimination in current registries penalizes centers treating complex pathologies. They may be reluctant to release their results without the security of risk stratification. Given the diversity of congenital heart surgery, a new method has been developed to stratify risks: the complexity score. This approach is based on the perceived opinions of a group of 50 internationally recognized surgeons and centers. It allows a hierarchical classification of surgical procedures according to mortality, morbidity, and surgical difficulty. Surgical procedures are scored globally on simple pathologies and in detail according to seven categories of risks. The complexity score in congenital heart surgery, also known as the Aristotle Score, is currently being developed as a collaborative effort of the members of the European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, the Congenital Heart Surgeons Society, and the European Congenital Heart Surgeons Foundation, and should be available next year.
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