Antithrombotic Medication and Major Complications After Mechanical Aortic Valve Replacement
- PMID: 37544143
- DOI: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2023.07.097
Antithrombotic Medication and Major Complications After Mechanical Aortic Valve Replacement
Abstract
Patients with mechanical aortic valve replacement (AVR) require lifelong vitamin K antagonist (VKA) therapy for stroke and systemic embolism prevention. However, VKA treatment predisposes patients to various types of bleeding. In the present study, we sought to assess the success of antithrombotic therapy and the occurrence and timing of strokes and bleeding events after mechanical AVR. A total of 308 patients who underwent isolated mechanical AVR were included in the study, and follow-up data were completed for 306 patients (99.4%). The median follow-up time was 7.3 (interquartile range 4.2 to 10.9) years. The risk for major bleeding was 5-fold compared with major stroke (6.2% vs 1.3% and 20.9% vs 4.0%, respectively; events rates 3.1 vs 0.5 per 100 patient-years, respectively) at 30-day and long-term follow-up, indicating good efficacy but inadequate safety of stroke prevention. At the time of the early postoperative major bleeding, the international normalized ratio was under the therapeutic range in 73.7% of the patients. However, most patients were on triple antithrombotic treatment consisting of subcutaneous enoxaparin, VKA, and a tail effect of discontinued aspirin. During the long-term follow-up, the most common site of bleeding was gastrointestinal (41.7%), followed by genitourinary bleeding (23.3%) and intracranial hemorrhage (18.3%). Furthermore, mortality was relatively high, with a 10-year survival estimate of 78.3%. In conclusion, although ischemic stroke is a well-identified adverse event after mechanical AVR, it seems that major bleeding is a frequent clinically relevant complication during perioperative and long-term follow-up. This finding underscores the recognition and management of modifiable bleeding risk factors.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02626871.
Keywords: bleeding; ischemic stroke; surgical aortic valve replacement.
Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest Dr. Björn received a research grant from Orion Research Foundation and the Vaasa Medical Foundation. Dr. Lehto received research grants from Orion Research Foundation, the Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, the Finnish Cultural Foundation, Turku University Foundation, and Emil Aaltonen Foundation. Dr. Malmberg has received travel grants and congress sponsorship (Abbott, Boston Lifesciences, Medtronic). Dr. Anttila has no conflicts interest to declare. Dr. Airaksinen received research grants from the Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, the Clinical Research Fund (VTR) of Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland and lecture fees from Bayer, and Boehringer Ingelheim. K. E. Juhani Airaksinen is a member in the advisory boards of Bayer, Astra Zeneca, and Bristol-Myers Squibb-Pfizer. Dr. Gunn received research grants from Turku University Research Foundation, Turku, Finland, the Clinical Research Fund (VTR) of Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland, and an unrestricted grant from Vifor Pharma. Dr. Kiviniemi received lecture fees from Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, MSD, Astra Zeneca, St Jude Medical, and Bristol-Myers-Squibb-Pfizer, and research grants from the Finnish Medical Foundation, The Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Clinical Research Fund (EVO) of Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland, Finnish Cardiac Society, the Emil Aaltonen Foundation, the Maud Kuistila Foundation, and an unrestricted grant from Bristol-Myers Squibb-Pfizer. Tuomas O. Kiviniemi is a member of the advisory board of Boehringer Ingelheim, and MSD.
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