Late Clinical Outcomes of Balloon-Expandable Valves in Small Annuli
气球
医学
外科
作者
Rebecca T. Hahn,Philippe Pibarot,Amr E. Abbas,Raj Makkar,Vinod H. Thourani,Philippe Généreux,Susheel Kodali,Samir Kapadia,Vasilis Babaliaros,Julien Ternacle,Alexis Théron,Nicole Cristell,Sarah Clarke,Yanglu Zhao,Maria Alu,Mahesh V. Madhavan,David J. Cohen,Jonathon Leipsic,John Webb,Michael J. Mack
Short-term clinical outcomes after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) are similar in individuals with small or large annuli. The longer term impact of prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM) and mean gradient (MG) post-TAVR in these patients remains controversial. The aim of this study was to investigate 5-year outcomes in patients with small vs large annuli. Patients from the PARTNER (Placement of Aortic Transcatheter Valves) 2 SAPIEN 3 intermediate-risk registry and the PARTNER 3 low-risk randomized controlled trial were grouped according to small (≤430 mm2) or large (>430 mm2) annular size. The primary endpoint was a composite of all-cause death, disabling stroke, or heart failure hospitalization. In addition, the relationships between both PPM and post-TAVR MG and clinical outcomes were analyzed. In total, 1,355 patients were included: 476 with small annuli (376.7 ± 41.9 mm2) and 879 with large annuli (518.3 ± 58.0 mm2). Patients with small annuli were older (age 79.6 ± 7.1 years vs 78.7 ± 7.8 years; P = 0.047), were more often female (75.0% vs 16.2%; P < 0.0001), had higher baseline Society of Thoracic Surgeons scores (4.3% ± 1.93% vs 4.0% ± 1.93%; P < 0.0001), and had higher left ventricular ejection fractions (66.3% ± 15.82% vs 59.7% ± 13.68%; P < 0.0001). Primary endpoint rates were similar at 1 year (7.8% vs 8.0%; P = 0.94) and 5 years (36.3% vs 35.8%; P = 0.83). Bioprosthetic valve failure was infrequent at 5 years in both groups (2.9% vs 2.1%; P = 0.46). Among female patients, outcomes were similar for small vs large annuli (primary endpoint; 33.6% vs 34.2%; P = 0.90). Among patients with small annuli, there was no association between 5-year outcomes and any severity of PPM (P = 0.22) or 30-day MG (P for nonlinearity = 0.96). Five-year clinical outcomes were excellent and comparable between patients with small vs large aortic annuli. Outcomes in patients with small annuli were not affected by 30-day MG or PPM.