Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2024)

Comparative Analysis of Long-Term Outcomes in Valve-Sparing Aortic Root Reimplantation: Full Sternotomy versus Mini-Sternotomy Approach

  • Jakub Staromłyński,
  • Adam Kowalówka,
  • Radosław Gocoł,
  • Damian Hudziak,
  • Małgorzata Żurawska,
  • Wojciech Nowak,
  • Michał Pasierski,
  • Wojciech Sarnowski,
  • Radosław Smoczyński,
  • Maciej Bartczak,
  • Jakub Brączkowski,
  • Sabina Sadecka,
  • Dominik Drobiński,
  • Marek Deja,
  • Piotr Szymański,
  • Piotr Suwalski,
  • Mariusz Kowalewski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13092692
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 2692

Abstract

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Background: Aortic valve-sparing aortic root replacement (VSARR) David procedure has not been routinely performed via minimally invasive access due to its complexity. Methods: We compared our results for mini-VSARR to sternotomy-VSARR from another excellence center. Results: Eighty-four patients, 62 in the sternotomy-VSARR group and 22 in the mini-VSARR group, were included. A baseline, the aneurysm dimensions were higher in the mini-VSARR group. Propensity matching resulted in 17 pairs with comparable characteristics. Aortic cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times were significantly longer in the mini-VSARR group, by 60 and 20 min, respectively (p p p = 0.230). Survival at 1, 5 and 10 years was 100%, 100%, and 95% and 95%, 87% and 84% in the mini-VSARR and sternotomy-VSARR groups, respectively. No repeat interventions on the aortic valve were documented. Echocardiographic follow-up was complete in 91% with excellent durability of repair regardless of the approach: no cases of moderate/severe aortic regurgitation were reported in the mini-VSARR group. Conclusions: The favorable outcomes, reduced drainage, and shorter hospital stays associated with the mini-sternotomy approach underscore its potential advantages expanding beyond cosmetic outcome.

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