JTCVS Techniques (Apr 2024)

Long-term outcome of bicuspid aortic valve repair using figure-of-8 hitch-up stitchesCentral MessagePerspective

  • Fei Xiang, MD,
  • Lin Chen, BA,
  • Raphaelle Chemtob, MD,
  • Eric E. Roselli, MD,
  • Shinya Unai, MD,
  • Patrick Vargo, MD,
  • Marijan Koprivanac, MD,
  • A. Marc Gillinov, MD,
  • Eugene H. Blackstone, MD,
  • Jeevanantham Rajeswaran, PhD,
  • Austin Firth, MS,
  • Milind Y. Desai, MD, MBA,
  • Brian Griffin, MD,
  • Vidyasagar Kalahasti, MD,
  • Lars G. Svensson, MD, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xjtc.2024.01.012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24
pp. 27 – 40

Abstract

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Objective: To maximize successful repair of bicuspid aortic valves by adding figure-of-8 hitch-up stitches at commissures. Methods: From 2000 to 2022, bicuspid aortic valve repair was performed on 1112 patients at Cleveland Clinic, with 367 patients receiving figure-of-8 hitch-up stitches along with classical techniques, including Cabrol suture, cusp plication, raphe resection, and valve-sparing root replacement. Operative outcomes, repair durability, and survival were assessed in the figure-of-8 hitch-up stitches cohort, and outcomes were compared among 195 balancing-score-matched patient pairs who underwent bicuspid aortic valve repair with and without figure-of-8 hitch-up stitches. Results: Patients who underwent bicuspid aortic valve repair with figure-of-8 stitches had an operative mortality of 0.3% (1 of 367) and in-hospital reoperation for aortic valve dysfunction of 1.1% (4 of 367). At 10 years, prevalence of severe aortic regurgitation was 8.6%, mean gradient 24 mm Hg, freedom from aortic valve reoperation 75%, and survival 98%. In matched cohorts, operative mortality was similar (0.51% vs 0%; P > .9) as were morbidities, including in-hospital reoperation due to aortic valve dysfunction (1.0% vs 1.5%; P > .9). Comparable long-term outcomes were observed at 10 years (prevalence of severe aortic regurgitation of 8.7% vs 5.0% [P = .11], mean gradient 18 vs 17 mm Hg [P = .40]; freedom from aortic valve reoperation 80% vs 81% [P = .73]; and survival 99.5% vs 94.6% [P = .18]). Conclusions: Figure-of-8 hitch-up stitch is a safe bicuspid aortic valve repair technique. It increases the likelihood of a successful repair without increasing risk of cusp tear and achieves satisfactory long-term survival and durability when added to classical repair techniques.

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