Seminars in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery | 2019

Outcomes After Aortic Valve Replacement for Asymptomatic Severe Aortic Regurgitation and Normal Ejection Fraction.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


We investigated long-term outcomes following aortic valve replacement (AVR) in asymptomatic patients with severe aortic regurgitation (AR) and normal left ventricular (LV) function. We reviewed 268 patients who underwent isolated AVR for chronic severe AR from 1991 to 2010 and enrolled 162 asymptomatic patients with normal LV ejection fraction (≥50%) preoperatively. They were divided into 2 groups according to LV dimension at surgery, the early stage C group (indexed LV end-systolic diameter ≤25 mm/m2 and LV end-diastolic diameter ≤65 mm, n\u202f=\u202f61), and late stage C group (indexed LV end-systolic diameter >25 mm/m2 and/or LV end-diastolic diameter >65 mm, n\u202f=\u202f101). Survival was compared with that of an age- and gender-matched Japanese general population using a one-sample log-rank test. Subgroup analysis was performed for patients who survived >10 years after AVR. The mean age of all patients was 59 ± 14 years and mean follow-up period was 10 ± 5 years. Survival after AVR for the early and late stage C groups was not statistically different (P = 0.57). Furthermore, survival for both groups was not statistically different from that of the general population (early stage C, P = 0.63; late stage C, P = 0.14). However, subgroup analysis showed that survival >10 years after AVR was significantly worse for the late stage C group as compared to that of the general population (P < 0.001). Long-term survival following AVR for asymptomatic AR with normal LV ejection fraction was excellent. However, survival more than 10 years after surgery might be dependent on LV dimension at surgery.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1053/j.semtcvs.2019.02.005
Language English
Journal Seminars in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery

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