Back to Search Start Over

Contemporary Etiologies, Outcomes, and Novel Risk Score for Isolated Tricuspid Regurgitation

Authors :
Tom Kai Ming Wang
Kevser Akyuz
Amgad Mentias
Jason Kirincich
Alejandro Duran Crane
Samantha Xu
Zoran B. Popovic
Bo Xu
A. Marc Gillinov
Gosta B. Pettersson
Brian P. Griffin
Milind Y. Desai
Source :
JACC. Cardiovascular imaging. 15(5)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The authors report etiologies and outcomes and devise a risk model in a large contemporary cohort of patients with isolated tricuspid regurgitation (TR).Isolated TR is a challenging clinical entity with heterogeneous etiology and often poor outcomes, with a paucity of recent research regarding the epidemiology of isolated TR.Consecutive patients with isolated TR graded at least moderate to severe on echocardiography from January 2004 to December 2018 (n = 9,045, mean age 70.4 ± 15.4 years, 60.3% women) were studied. TR etiologies were individually adjudicated as secondary or primary, with subcategories. All-cause death during follow-up was the primary endpoint, with associations between etiology and outcomes analyzed and a risk model created.Primary and secondary TR etiologies were present in 470 (5.2%) and 8,575 (94.8%) patients, respectively. The main secondary etiologies were left heart disease in 4,664 (54.4%), atrial functional in 2,086 (24.3%), and pulmonary disease in 1,454 (17.0%), and the main primary etiologies were endocarditis in 222 (47.2%), degenerative or prolapse in 86 (18.3%), and prosthetic valve failure in 79 (16.8%). There were 3,987 deaths (44.0%) over a mean follow-up period of 2.6 ± 3.3 years. In unadjusted analyses, patients with secondary TR had worse survival than those with primary TR (HR: 1.56; 95% CI: 1.32-1.85), but this result was not statistically significant in multivariable analysis. The authors devised and internally validated a risk score for predicting 1-year mortality in these patients.Secondary TR constituted 95% of isolated significant TR and conferred worse survival than primary TR in unadjusted but not adjusted analyses. The present novel risk score stratifies the risk for 1-year death and may influence decision making for management in these high-risk patients.

Details

ISSN :
18767591
Volume :
15
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC. Cardiovascular imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....607b5efca58ac170393e562bea9994c0