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Cardiac surgery following transcatheter aortic valve replacement

Authors :
Sven Peterss
Steffen Massberg
Christian Hagl
Jörg Hausleiter
Simon Deseive
Christoph Mueller
D Joskowiak
Shekhar Saha
Sebastian Sadoni
Source :
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. 60:1149-1155
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to retrospectively analyse surgical outcomes of patients undergoing secondary cardiac surgery after initial transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). METHODS Between December 2012 and February 2020, a total of 41 consecutive patients underwent cardiac surgery after a TAVR procedure at our institution. Patients who underwent emergency operations due to periprocedural complications such as ventricular rupture and TAVR dislocation were excluded from this study (n = 12). Thus, 29 patients were included in the analysis. Data are presented as medians (25th–75th quartiles) or as absolute numbers (percentages). RESULTS The median age was 76 years (68–80); 58.6% were men. The median time to a secondary conventional procedure was 23 months (8–40), with 8 patients requiring surgical intervention within the first year post TAVR. The indications for secondary conventional procedures were prosthesis endocarditis (n = 15), prosthesis degeneration or dysfunction (n = 7) and progression of valvular, aortic or coronary artery disease (n = 7). Surgical redo aortic valve replacement was performed in 24 patients (82.8%). No complications involving the aortic root or the aortomitral continuity were observed. The operative mortality was 10.3%. Extracorporeal life support was required in 3 patients (10.3%) for a median duration of 3 days (3–3 days). No adverse cerebrovascular events were observed postoperatively. Postoperatively, 4 patients (13.8%) required a pacemaker and 7 patients (24.1%) required renal replacement therapy. Overall survival at 1 year was 83.0%. CONCLUSIONS Conventional cardiac surgical procedures following TAVR are feasible with reasonable results and a low complication rate.

Details

ISSN :
1873734X and 10107940
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....84edc84d8f9c7dc2f78d9547a67aa455