Aortic valve replacement associated with survival in severe regurgitation and low ejection fraction
- PMID: 29092919
- DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2017-312024
Aortic valve replacement associated with survival in severe regurgitation and low ejection fraction
Erratum in
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Correction: Aortic valve replacement associated with survival in severe regurgitation and low ejection fraction.Heart. 2018 Aug;104(16):e2. doi: 10.1136/heartjnl-2017-312024corr1. Heart. 2018. PMID: 30049833 No abstract available.
Abstract
Objectives: Although guidelines support aortic valve replacement (AVR) in patients with severe aortic regurgitation (AR) and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) <50%, severe left ventricular dysfunction (LVEF <35%) is thought to confer high surgical risk. We sought to determine if a survival benefit exists with AVR compared with medical management in this high-risk, relatively rare population.
Methods: A large institutional echocardiography database was queried to identify patients with severe AR and LVEF <35%. Manual chart review was performed. Due to small sample size and population heterogeneity, corrected group prognosis method was applied, which calculates the adjusted survival curve for each individual using fitted Cox proportional hazard model. Average survival adjusted for comorbidities and age was then calculated using the weighted average of the individual survival curves.
Results: Initially, 2 54 614 echocardiograms were considered, representing 1 45 785 unique patients, of which 40 patients met inclusion criteria. Of those, 18 (45.0%) underwent AVR and 22 (55.0%) were managed medically. Absolute mortality was 27.8% in the AVR group and 91.2% in the medical management group. After multivariate adjustment, end-stage renal disease (HR=17.633, p=0.0335) and peripheral arterial disease (HR=6.050, p=0.0180) were associated with higher mortality. AVR was associated with lower mortality (HR=0.143, p=0.0490). Mean follow-up time of the study cohort was 6.58 years, and mean survival for patients undergoing AVR was 6.31 years.
Conclusions: Even after adjustment for clinical characteristics and patient age, AVR is associated with higher survival for patients with low LVEF and severe AR. Although treatment selection bias cannot be completely eliminated by this analysis, these results provide some evidence that surgery may be associated with prolonged survival in this high-risk patient group.
Keywords: aortic regurgitation; echocardiography; heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; valve disease surgery.
© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: None declared.
Comment in
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Improving outcomes in chronic aortic regurgitation: timely diagnosis, access to specialist assessment and earlier surgery.Heart. 2018 May;104(10):794-795. doi: 10.1136/heartjnl-2017-312518. Epub 2017 Nov 9. Heart. 2018. PMID: 29122929 No abstract available.
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