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Surgical vs Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement in Patients With a Low Ejection Fraction.

Authors :
Arafat AA
Alawami MH
Hassan E
Alshammari A
AlFayez LA
Albabtain MA
Ismail HH
Adam AI
Pragliola C
Algarni KD
Source :
Angiology [Angiology] 2023 Aug; Vol. 74 (7), pp. 664-671. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Aug 13.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Currently, there is no preference for surgical (SAVR) vs transcatheter (TAVR) aortic valve replacement in patients with low ejection fraction (EF). The present study retrospectively compared the outcomes of SAVR vs TAVR in patients with EF ≤40% (70 SAVR and 117 TAVR patients). Study outcomes were survival and the composite endpoint of stroke, aortic valve reintervention, and heart failure readmission. The patients who had TAVR were older (median: 75 (25-75th percentiles: 69-81) vs 51 (39-66) years old; P < .001) with higher EuroSCORE II (4.95 (2.99-9.85) vs 2 (1.5-3.25); P < .001). Postoperative renal impairment was more common with SAVR (8 (12.5%) vs 4 (3.42%); P = .03), and they had longer hospital stay [9 (7-15) vs 4 (2-8) days; P < .001). There was no difference between groups in stroke, reintervention, and readmission (Sub-distributional Hazard ratio: .95 (.37-2.45); P = .92). Survival at 1 and 5 years was 95% and 91% with SAVR and 89% and 63% with TAVR. Adjusted survival was comparable between groups. EF improved significantly (β: .28 (.23-.33); P < 0.001) with no difference between groups ( P = .85). In conclusion, TAVR could be as safe as SAVR in patients with low EF.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1940-1574
Volume :
74
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Angiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35968605
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/00033197221121012