Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Oct 2022)

Prosthetic Valve Function after Aortic Valve Replacement for Severe Aortic Stenosis by Transcatheter Procedure versus Surgery

  • Shunsuke Saito,
  • Toshimi Sairenchi,
  • Shotaro Hirota,
  • Ken Niitsuma,
  • Shohei Yokoyama,
  • Yasuyuki Kanno,
  • Yuta Kanazawa,
  • Masahiro Tezuka,
  • Yusuke Takei,
  • Go Tsuchiya,
  • Taisuke Konishi,
  • Ikuko Shibasaki,
  • Koji Ogata,
  • Osamu Monta,
  • Yasushi Tsutsumi,
  • Hirotsugu Fukuda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9100355
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. 355

Abstract

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Background This study compared the clinical outcomes of transcatheter (TAVR) and surgical (SAVR) aortic valve replacements, focusing on postoperative valvular performance assessed by echocardiography. Method and Results A total of 425 patients who underwent TAVR (230 patients) or SAVR (195 patients) were included. Postoperative effective orifice area index (EOAI) was higher in the TAVR group (1.27 ± 0.35 cm2/m2) than in the SAVR group (1.06 ± 0.27 cm2/m2, p p p 2/m2) had lower freedom from composite events than those without this PPM criterion (p = 0.008). Patients with mild or greater PVL also had lower freedom from composite events than those without this PVL criterion (p = 0.017). Conclusions Postoperative valvular performance of TAVR was superior to that of SAVR in terms of EOAI. This merit was counterbalanced by the significantly lower rates of PVL in patients who underwent SAVR. The overall clinical outcomes were similar between the study groups.

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