ESC Heart Failure (Feb 2021)

Two year outcome in nonagenarians undergoing percutaneous mitral valve repair

  • Aikaterini Christidi,
  • Jafer Haschemi,
  • Maximilian Spieker,
  • Florian Bönner,
  • Malte Kelm,
  • Ralf Westenfeld,
  • Patrick Horn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.13127
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 577 – 585

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Aims Percutaneous mitral valve repair (PMVR) has emerged as standard treatment in selected patients with clinically relevant mitral regurgitation (MR) and increased surgical risk. We aimed to evaluate the safety and clinical outcomes in nonagenarians undergoing PMVR. Methods and results Altogether, 493 patients with severe MR who were treated with PMVR were included in this open‐label prospective study and followed up for 2 years. We treated 25 patients with PMVR aged 90 years or above, 185 patients aged 80–89 years, and 283 patients aged <80 years. PMVR in nonagenarians was safe and did not differ from PMVR in younger patients in terms of safety endpoints. Device success did not differ among the groups (100% in nonagenarians, 95.7% in octogenarians, and 95.1% in septuagenarians, P = 0.100). Unadjusted 2 year mortality was 28% in nonagenarians, 32.4% in octogenarians, and 19.8% in septuagenarians (P = 0.008). Kaplan–Meier curves confirmed similar 2 year survival in the nonagenarian and octogenarian groups (P = 0.657). In the multivariate analysis, age [hazard ratio (HR) 1.031, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.002–1.060, P = 0.034], higher post‐procedural transmitral valve gradients (HR 1.187, 95% CI 1.104–1.277, P = 0.001), and post‐procedural acute kidney injury (HR 2.360, 95% CI 1.431–3.893, P = 0.001) were independent predictors of 2 year mortality. Altogether, 89.4% of the nonagenarians, 85.9% of the octogenarians, and 86.4% of the septuagenarians had MR grade of 2+ or less at 1 year after PMVR (P = 0.910). New York Heart Association functional class improved in the vast majority of patients, irrespective of age (P = 0.129). After 1 year, 9.5% of the nonagenarians, 22.3% of the octogenarians, and 25.2% of the septuagenarians (each P = 0.001 compared with baseline) suffered from New York Heart Association Functional Class III or IV. The rate of heart failure rehospitalization in the first 12 months after PMVR did not differ among the groups (16% in the nonagenarians, 16.7% in the octogenarians, and 17.7% in the septuagenarians) (P = 0.954). Quality of life assessed by the Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire before and at 1 year after PMVR improved in all age groups (P = 0.001). Conclusions Percutaneous mitral valve repair in carefully selected nonagenarians is feasible and safe with intermediate‐term beneficial effects comparable with those in younger patients.

Keywords