Transcatheter aortic valve implantation versus redo surgery for failing surgical aortic bioprostheses: A multicentre propensity score analysis

Marco Spaziano, Darren Mylotte, Pascal Thériault-Lauzier, Ole De Backer, Lars Søndergaard, Johan Bosmans, Nicolas Debry, Thomas Modine, Marco Barbanti, Corrado Tamburino, Jan Malte Sinning, Eberhard Grube, Georg Nickenig, Fritz Mellert, Sabine Bleiziffer, Rüdiger Lange, Benoit De Varennes, Kevin Lachapelle, Giuseppe Martucci, Nicolo Piazza

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

58 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aims: Transcatheter aortic valve implantation for a failing surgical bioprosthesis (TAV-in-SAV) has become an alternative for patients at high risk for redo surgical aortic valve replacement (redo-SAVR). Comparisons between these approaches are non-existent. This study aimed to compare clinical and echocardiographic outcomes of patients undergoing TAV-in-SAV versus redo-SAVR after accounting for baseline differences by propensity score matching. Methods and results: Patients from seven centres in Europe and Canada who had undergone either TAV-in-SAV (n=79) or redo-SAVR (n=126) were identified. Significant independent predictors used for propensity scoring were age, NYHA functional class, number of prior cardiac surgeries, urgent procedure, pulmonary hypertension, and COPD grade. Using a calliper range of ±0.05, a total of 78 well-matched patient pairs were found. All-cause mortality was similar between groups at 30 days (6.4% redo-SAVR vs. 3.9% TAV-in-SAV; p=0.49) and one year (13.1% redo-SAVR vs. 12.3% TAV-in-SAV; p=0.80). Both groups also showed similar incidences of stroke (0% redo-SAVR vs. 1.3% TAV-in-SAV; p=1.0) and new pacemaker implantation (10.3% redo-SAVR vs. 10.3% TAV-in-SAV; p=1.0). The incidence of acute kidney injury requiring dialysis was numerically lower in the TAV-in-SAV group (11.5% redo-SAVR vs. 3.8% TAV-in-SAV; p=0.13). The TAV-in-SAV group had a significantly shorter median total hospital stay (12 days redo-SAVR vs. 9 days TAV-in-SAV; p=0.001). Conclusions: Patients with aortic bioprosthesis failure treated with either redo-SAVR or TAV-in-SAV have similar 30-day and one-year clinical outcomes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1149-1156
Number of pages8
JournalEuroIntervention
Volume13
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2017

Keywords

  • Prior cardiovascular surgery
  • Valve restenosis
  • Valve-in-valve

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