Severe aortic stenosis management in heart valve centres compared with primary/secondary care centres
- PMID: 36657962
- DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2022-321566
Severe aortic stenosis management in heart valve centres compared with primary/secondary care centres
Abstract
Objective: Current guidelines recommend use of heart valve centres (HVCs) to deliver optimal quality of care for patients with valve disease but there is no evidence to support this. The hypothesis of this study is that patient care with severe aortic stenosis (AS) will differ in HVCs compared with satellite centres. We aimed to compare the treatment of patients with AS at HVCs (tertiary care hospitals with full access to AS interventions) to satellites (hospitals without such access).
Methods: IMPULSE enhanced is a European, observational, prospective registry enrolling consecutive patients with newly diagnosed severe AS at four HVCs and 10 satellites. Clinical characteristics, interventions performed and outcomes up to 1 year by site-type were examined.
Results: Among 790 patients, 594 were recruited in HVCs and 196 in satellites. At baseline, patients in HVCs had more severe valve disease (higher peak aortic velocity (4.3 vs 4.1 m/s; p=0.008)) and greater comorbidity (coronary artery disease (CAD) (44% vs 27%; p<0.001) prior myocardial infarction (MI) (11% vs 5.1%; p=0.011) and chronic pulmonary disease (17% vs 8.9%; p=0.007)) than those presenting in satellites. An aortic valve replacement was performed more often by month 3 in HVCs than satellites in the overall population (52.6% of vs 31.3%; p<0.001) and in symptomatic patients (66.7% vs 43.2%, p<0.001). One-year survival rate was higher for patients in HVCs than satellites (HR2.19; 95% CI 1.28 to 3.73 total population and 2.89 (95%CI 1.64 to 5.11) for symptomatic patients.
Conclusions: Our data support the implementation of referral pathways that direct patients to HVCs performing both surgery and transcatheter interventions.
Trial registration number: NCT03112629.
Keywords: aortic stenosis; quality of health care; transcatheter aortic valve replacement.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: IPPMed has received research funding and honoraria for consultancy from Edwards Lifesciences. JK and MT are employees of the funder. TKR, NF, ML, RPS and DM-Z received honoraria for advisory board meetings from Edwards Lifesciences. The institutions of these authors received funding for employing a study nurse. DM-Z is on the Editorial Board of BMJ Heart.
Comment in
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Severe aortic stenosis and the need for the right treatment, in the right place, at the right time.Heart. 2023 May 26;109(12):896-897. doi: 10.1136/heartjnl-2022-322195. Heart. 2023. PMID: 36914251 No abstract available.
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