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Dive into the research topics where Luca Salvatore De Santo is active.

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Featured researches published by Luca Salvatore De Santo.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Dose-dependent fetal complications of warfarin in pregnant women with mechanical heart valves

Nicola Vitale; Marisa De Feo; Luca Salvatore De Santo; Alessio Pollice; Nicola Tedesco; Maurizio Cotrufo

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to assess the incidence of warfarin fetal complications and whether they are dose-dependent. BACKGROUND Gravid patients with mechanical heart valves require long-term anticoagulant therapy. Controversy exists concerning the appropriate treatment of these patients. METHODS Forty-three women on warfarin carrying out 58 pregnancies were studied. For each patient with full-term pregnancy a caesarian section was scheduled for the 38th week during brief warfarin discontinuation. Maternal and fetal complications were evaluated. Fetal complications were divided according to the warfarin dosage < or = 5 mg and > 5 mg necessary to keep an international normalized ratio (INR) of 2.5 to 3.5, and analyzed subsequently. RESULTS A total of 58 pregnancies were observed: 31 healthy babies (30 full term, 1 premature) and 27 fetal complications (22 spontaneous abortions, 2 warfarin embryopathies, 1 stillbirth, 1 ventricular septal defect, 1 growth retardation) were recorded. Two maternal valve thromboses occurred. No fetal or maternal bleeding was observed during caesarian sections or premature vaginal delivery. Patients whose warfarin doses during pregnancy were > 5 mg had 22 fetal complications, whereas those taking a dose < or = 5 mg had only five fetal complications (p = 0.0001). For an increase of the warfarin dose there was a substantially increased probability of fetal complications (p < 0.0001; p < 0.7316). CONCLUSIONS There is a close dependency between warfarin dosage and fetal complications. Patients on warfarin anticoagulation may be delivered by planned caesarian section at the 38th week while briefly interrupting anticoagulation.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2010

Biomechanical implications of the congenital bicuspid aortic valve: A finite element study of aortic root function from in vivo data

Carlo Angelo Conti; Alessandro Della Corte; Emiliano Votta; Luca Del Viscovo; Ciro Bancone; Luca Salvatore De Santo; Alberto Redaelli

OBJECTIVE Congenital bicuspid aortic valves frequently cause aortic stenosis or regurgitation. Improved understanding of valve and root biomechanics is needed to achieve advancements in surgical repair techniques. By using imaging-derived data, finite element models were developed to quantify aortic valve and root biomechanical alterations associated with bicuspid geometry. METHODS A dynamic 3-dimensional finite element model of the aortic root with a bicuspid aortic valve (type 1 right/left) was developed. The models geometry was based on measurements from 2-dimensional magnetic resonance images acquired in 8 normotensive and otherwise healthy subjects with echocardiographically normal function of their bicuspid aortic valves. Numeric results were compared with those obtained from our previous model representing the normal root with a tricuspid aortic valve. The effects of raphe thickening on valve kinematics and stresses were also evaluated. RESULTS During systole, the bicuspid valve opened asymmetrically compared with the normal valve, resulting in an elliptic shape of its orifice. During diastole, the conjoint cusp occluded a larger proportion of the valve orifice and leaflet bending was altered, although competence was preserved. The bicuspid model presented higher stresses compared with the tricuspid model, particularly in the central basal region of the conjoint cusp (+800%). The presence of a raphe partially reduced stress in this region but increased stress in the other cusp. CONCLUSIONS Aortic valve function is altered in clinically normally functioning bicuspid aortic valves. Bicuspid geometry per se entails abnormal leaflet stress. The stress location suggests that leaflet stress may play a role in tissue remodeling at the raphe region and in early leaflet degeneration.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2009

Preoperative anemia in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting predicts acute kidney injury

Luca Salvatore De Santo; Gianpaolo Romano; Alessandro Della Corte; Vincenzo de Simone; Francesco Grimaldi; Maurizio Cotrufo; Marisa De Feo

OBJECTIVES Recent authoritative studies suggested that low preoperative hemoglobin concentration may affect cardiac surgery outcomes. This study aimed, primarily, to investigate whether preoperative anemia is an independent determinant of adverse events after coronary artery bypass grafting and, secondarily, to evaluate the potential dose responsiveness between anemia severity and primary end points. METHODS This single-center prospective study investigated 1214 consecutive patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting between January 2004 and June 2007, collecting 100 variables per patient. In 1047 patients (median age 64 years, 18.8% female, 38.9% diabetic, 31.9% urgent/emergency, 15.3% with low preoperative left ventricular ejection fraction) who underwent on-pump procedures and received no preoperative transfusion, the prevalence of preoperative anemia (according to World Health Organization definition) and its unadjusted and adjusted relationships with in-hospital death, cardiac morbidity, and acute kidney injury (AKI-RIFLE [Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss, End-stage kidney disease] criteria) were obtained. RESULTS The prevalence of preoperative anemia was 28%. In-hospital death averaged 3.9%, cardiac morbidity 7.3%, and acute kidney injury 4%. Unadjusted odds ratios (Ors) for in-hospital death, cardiac morbidity, and acute kidney injury were 3.8 (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.0-7.3), 1.7 (95% CI 1.1-2.8), and 4.0 (95% CI 2.1-7.6), respectively. Adjusting for anemia in confounders proved an independent predictor of acute kidney injury (OR 2.06; 95% CI 1.14-3.70), whereas the cardiac morbidity and in-hospital mortality were independently predicted by kidney function. No dose-response relationship emerged between anemia severity and acute kidney injury. CONCLUSIONS Preoperative anemia is independently associated with acute kidney injury after coronary artery bypass grafting. Further studies are warranted to determine whether preoperative low hemoglobin concentration is a marker of severity of illness or a modifiable risk factor.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Prosthesis-Patient Mismatch in the Elderly: Survival, Ventricular Mass Regression, and Quality of Life

Mariano Vicchio; Alessandro Della Corte; Luca Salvatore De Santo; Marisa De Feo; Giuseppe Caianiello; Michelangelo Scardone; Maurizio Cotrufo

BACKGROUND Evaluation of the impact of prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM) on long-term outcome and quality of life (QOL) in elderly patients who underwent implantation of small size bileaflet prostheses for aortic stenosis. METHODS Between September 1988 and September 2006, 377 patients aged greater than 70 years underwent aortic valve replacement with a small size bileaflet prosthesis (17, 19, and 21 mm) in one Institution. The study populations survivors (345 patients) were divided into three groups according to the indexed effective orifice area (EOAI): Group A included patients with EOAI less than 0.60 cm(2)/m(2); group B included patients with EOAI ranging between 0.61 and 0.84 cm(2)/m(2); and group C included patients with EOAI 0.85 cm(2)/m(2) or greater. Cumulative and comparative analyses of long-term outcomes and of left ventricular mass regression were performed. The QOL was evaluated with the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) questionnaire. RESULTS Overall hospital mortality was 8.5% (32 patients). Group A included 33 patients (9.6%), group B 175 (50.7%), and group C 137 (39.7%). Actuarial survival was 88.8% +/- 0.016 at 1 year, 82.1% +/- 0.022 at 5 years, and 76.7% +/- 0.032 at 10 years. No difference emerged among the three groups. A significant reduction in left ventricular mass was observed in all groups and in all patient subsets of prosthetic size. The scores obtained in the SF-36 test were similar in the three groups and significantly higher than those of the general population (p < 0.001 in all domains). CONCLUSIONS Incidence of severe PPM is low after aortic valve replacement. Presence of severe or moderate PPM, did not influence long-term outcome, left ventricular mass regression and QOL in a population of septuagenarians.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Tissue Versus Mechanical Prostheses: Quality of Life in Octogenarians

Mariano Vicchio; Alessandro Della Corte; Luca Salvatore De Santo; Marisa De Feo; Giuseppe Caianiello; Michelangelo Scardone; Maurizio Cotrufo

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to determine whether changes in prognosis and quality of life (QOL) after aortic valve replacement (AVR) in octogenarians differ depending on the choice of mechanical (MP) or tissue (BP) valves. METHODS Between July 1992 and September 2006, 160 consecutive octogenarians underwent AVR with (18.8%) or without concomitant coronary artery bypass grafting. At follow-up (mean 3.4 +/- 2.8 years, 552 patient-years, 98.3% complete), 121 were still alive and answered the Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36) QOL questionnaire. RESULTS Group BP had 62 patients. Group MP had 98 patients. Preoperative risk factors were comparable except group BP was older. Global hospital mortality was 8.8%. There were 21 late deaths, 61.9% of which were not valve- or anticoagulation-related. A significant difference emerged in 1-, 3-, 5- and 8-year actuarial survival rates (BP: 86.4% +/- 0.04%, 76.9% +/- 0.06%, 58.1% +/- 0.1%, 46.5% +/- 0.14%, respectively, vs MP: 91.3% +/- 0.03%, 88.6% +/- 0.03%, 81.6% +/- 0.05%, 70% +/- 0.67%; p = 0.025) but not in terms of 8-year freedom from valve-related complications (82.6% +/- 0.1% vs 87% +/- 0.053%, p = 0.55). One anticoagulant-related hemorrhage occurred in group MP; one stroke occurred in group BP. Survivors had significant improvement in New York Heart Association functional class compared with preoperatively (1.1 vs 2.8, p < 0.001) Mean QOL scores were satisfactory and substantially comparable between the two groups; in seven domains, scores were higher than those of the age- and sex-matched general Italian population. CONCLUSIONS Long-term survival after AVR in selected octogenarians was similar to that of the general elderly population. The device type exerted no influence on QOL.


American Heart Journal | 2010

LOWERing the INtensity of oral anticoaGulant Therapy in patients with bileaflet mechanical aortic valve replacement: Results from the “LOWERING-IT” Trial

Michele Torella; Daniele Torella; Paolo Chiodini; Marco Franciulli; Giampaolo Romano; Luca Salvatore De Santo; Marisa De Feo; Cristiano Amarelli; Ferdinando Carlo Sasso; Teresa Salvatore; Georgina M. Ellison; Ciro Indolfi; Maurizio Cotrufo; Gianantonio Nappi

BACKGROUND Moderate anticoagulation after mechanical heart valve replacement has been proposed to reduce the risk of bleeding related to lifelong anticoagulation. However, the efficacy of such reduced antithrombotic regimens is still unknown. The present prospective open-label, single-center, randomized controlled trial aimed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of reduced oral anticoagulation after isolated mechanical aortic valve replacement. METHODS Low-risk patients undergoing bileaflet mechanical aortic valve replacement were randomized to a low International normalized ratio (INR) target (1.5-2.5; LOW-INR group) or to the standard currently recommended INR (2.0-3.0; CONVENTIONAL-INR group) through daily coumarine oral therapy. No aspirin was added. Median follow-up was 5.6 years. The primary outcome was assessment of noninferiority of the low over the standard anticoagulation regimen on thromboembolic events. Secondary end point was the superiority of the reduced INR target strategy on bleeding events. RESULTS We analyzed 396 patients (197 in the LOW-INR group and 199 in the CONVENTIONAL-INR group). The mean of INR was 1.94 +/- 0.21 and 2.61 +/- 0.25 in the LOW-INR and CONVENTIONAL-INR groups, respectively (P < .001). One versus three thromboembolic events occurred in the LOW-INR and CONVENTIONAL-INR, respectively, meeting the noninferiority criterion (P = .62). Total hemorrhagic events occurred in 6 patients in the LOW-INR group and in 16 patients in the CONVENTIONAL-INR group (P = .04). CONCLUSIONS LOWERING-IT trial established that the proposed LOW-INR target is safe and feasible in low-risk patients after bileaflet aortic mechanical valve replacement. It results in similar thrombotic events and in a significant reduction of bleeding occurrence when compared to the conventional anticoagulation regimen.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2012

Mechanical Aortic Valve Replacement in Young Women Planning on Pregnancy : Maternal and Fetal Outcomes Under Low Oral Anticoagulation, a Pilot Observational Study on a Comprehensive Pre-Operative Counseling Protocol

Luca Salvatore De Santo; Gianpaolo Romano; Alessandro Della Corte; Veronica D'Oria; Gianantonio Nappi; Salvatore Giordano; Maurizio Cotrufo; Marisa De Feo

OBJECTIVES This pilot prospective observational study aimed to evaluate the maternal and fetal outcomes of pregnancies under low-dose oral anticoagulation therapy after aortic mechanical replacement. BACKGROUND Need for valve replacement is still an issue for young women with native valve disease who are planning on future pregnancy. Choice of replacement device is a challenging clinical task. METHODS A comprehensive pre-operative counseling protocol to guide choice of replacement device was developed. The pre-operative anticoagulation trial to determine the warfarin daily dosage needed to reach target international normalized ratio (INR) represented the main stem of such protocol. Pregnancies on low-dose anticoagulation therapy (target INR: 1.5 to 2.5) were allowed in a highly selected subset of mechanical aortic valve recipients. RESULTS Twenty-two patients of 40 originally referred for native valve disease surgery requiring valve replacement, safely underwent the pre-operative anticoagulation challenge. No maternal or fetal complications were detected in 16 pregnancies under low oral anticoagulation. Patterns of warfarin daily dosage and induced INRs were characterized during pregnancy. CONCLUSIONS In this small sample observational study, a pre-operative anticoagulation therapy trial helped young women scheduled for valve replacement to acquire complete information as to the choice of prosthetic device. In selected third-generation mechanical aortic prosthesis recipients, low-dose anticoagulation therapy seems safe and feasible for both mother and fetus. Further studies are needed to validate this approach.


The Scientific World Journal | 2012

The Need for a Specific Risk Prediction System in Native Valve Infective Endocarditis Surgery

Marisa De Feo; Maurizio Cotrufo; Antonio Carozza; Luca Salvatore De Santo; F Amendolara; Salvatore Giordano; Ester Della Ratta; Gianantonio Nappi; Alessandro Della Corte

The need for a specific risk score system for infective endocarditis (IE) surgery has been previously claimed. In a single-center pilot study, preliminary to future multicentric development and validation, bivariate and multivariate (logistic regression) analysis of early postoperative mortality predictors in 440 native valve IE patients were performed. Mathematical procedures assigned scores to the independent predictors emerged (AUC of the ROC curve: 0.88). Overall mortality was 9.1%. Six predictors were identified and assigned scores, including age (5–13 points), renal failure (5), NYHA class IV (9), critical preoperative state (11), lack of preoperative attainment of blood culture negativity (5), perivalvular involvement (5). Four risk classes were drawn ranging from “very low risk” (≤5 points, mean predicted mortality 1%), and to “very high risk” (≥20 points, 43% mortality). IE-specific risk stratification models are both needed, as disease-specific factors (e.g., cultures, abscess), beside the generic ones (e.g., age, renal impairment) affect mortality, and feasible.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2010

Leukoreduction program for red blood cell transfusions in coronary surgery: Association with reduced acute kidney injury and in-hospital mortality

Gianpaolo Romano; Ciro Mastroianni; Ciro Bancone; Alessandro Della Corte; Nicola Galdieri; Gianantonio Nappi; Luca Salvatore De Santo

OBJECTIVE Leukocytes in allogeneic blood transfusions cause several immunomodulatory events. This before-and-after cohort study evaluated clinical outcomes after adoption of prestorage leukoreduction program for blood transfusions, with particular focus on acute kidney injury. METHODS One thousand thirty-four consecutive patients who underwent on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting between January 2004 and December 2007 were included. Propensity score analysis for transfusion was performed in the whole population; patients who were actually transfused were then divided according to leukoreduction. From these 2 groups, 147 pairs matched for propensity score were considered to evaluate with bivariate and multivariable analyses the effects of leukoreduction, with all-cause in-hospital mortality and morbidity as main outcomes. RESULTS Unadjusted in-hospital mortalities were 6.6% for the entire cohort and 44.2% for those with acute kidney injury. In the matched population, after introduction of leukoreduction, mortality rates decreased to 5.4% (vs 11.4%) and acute kidney injury (RIFLE [Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss of function, End-stage renal disease] class R or greater) dropped from 51.7% to 41.5% (relative risk -20%, P < .045). No difference emerged regarding other major complications. At multivariable analysis, intra-aortic balloon pump, RIFLE score, and propensity score for transfusion proved independent predictors of in-hospital mortality. Intra-aortic balloon pump and nonleukodepleted transfusion emerged as independent predictors of acute kidney injury. Multivariable analysis on the overall cohort of transfused patients confirmed that nonleukodepleted transfusion was an independent predictor of acute kidney injury. CONCLUSIONS Leukoreduction of allogeneic blood products is associated with decreased acute kidney injury and mortality in highly transfused patients.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Microbiologically documented nosocomial infections after cardiac surgery: an 18-month prospective tertiary care centre report

Luca Salvatore De Santo; Ciro Bancone; Giuseppe Santarpino; Gianpaolo Romano; Marisa De Feo; Michelangelo Scardone; Nicola Galdieri; Maurizio Cotrufo

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to prospectively evaluate frequency, characteristics, and predictors of nosocomial infections (NI) in a tertiary care centre. METHODS Study population included 925 patients (mean age 62.3+/-12.5, 32.3% females, 22.9% diabetics, 6.8% with previous cardiac procedures) operated on between June 2005 and December 2006 (CABG 48.72%, valvular procedures 30.05%, thoracic aortic 10.9%, heart transplantations 3.78% and miscellanea 6.55%, procedure status: elective 72.9%, urgent 15.9% and emergent 11.2%). The study population was divided in two groups according to development of NI. Primary endpoints were multiorgan failure (MOF) and hospital mortality in the two groups. Secondary endpoints were length of intubation, intensive care unit (ICU) stay and overall hospitalisation. Univariate and multivariate analysis of NI predictors was conducted between 115 perioperative variables. RESULTS Eighty-three patients (9%) developed a NI. Infections affected respiratory tract in 51.8%, blood stream in 20.5 and wound infection in 27.7 (13.3% deep wound). Staphylococcal species (60.6%) predominated in blood stream and surgical wound infections while Gram-negative species predominated in respiratory infections. Patients affected by NI experienced significantly higher incidence of MOF (12% vs 0.8%) and hospital mortality (24.1 vs 6.9%). Development of NI significantly lengthened all the steps of postoperative process of care (length of intubation: 49.9+/-73 h vs 19.1+/-35.2; ICU stay: 10.4+/-12.8 days vs 3.4+/-4.6 and hospitalisation 20.7+/-15.3 vs 10.6+/-7). Independent predictors of NI were immunosuppressive therapy [OR 12.9 (CI 5.07-31.2)], reintubation [OR 10.3 (CI 4.6-2.3)], stroke [OR 9.5 (CI 1.8-49)], resternotomy for bleeding [OR 6.7 (CI 1.9-23.6)], emergent/urgent status [OR 3.6 (CI 1.5-8.4)], CVVH [OR 3.2 (CI 1.4-7.5)] and length of intubation [OR 1.03 (CI 1.01-1.1)]. CONCLUSIONS NI still represents a serious complication. Presence of identified determinants of NI should prompt modification of management algorithms.

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Dive into the Luca Salvatore De Santo's collaboration.

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Maurizio Cotrufo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Alessandro Della Corte

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Marisa De Feo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Gianpaolo Romano

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Cristiano Amarelli

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Gianantonio Nappi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Michelangelo Scardone

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Natale G. De Santo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Ciro Bancone

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Ciro Maiello

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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