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Incidence and outcomes of emergent cardiac surgery during transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI): insights from the European Registry on Emergent Cardiac Surgery during TAVI (EuRECS-TAVI)

Authors :
Alfredo Giuseppe Cerillo
Darren Mylotte
Piotr Szymański
Katarzyna Czerwińska-Jelonkiewicz
Julinda Mehilli
Holger Eggebrecht
Marco Spaziano
Uri Landes
Sabine Bleiziffer
Joachim Schofer
Tanja K. Rudolph
Antti Siljander
Christian Hengstenberg
Andreas Zierer
Jörg Kempfert
Moritz Seiffert
Fausto Biancari
Eduardo Bossone
Raphael Philippart
Christoph Naber
Rajendra H. Mehta
Ran Kornowski
Won-Keun Kim
Augusto D'Onofrio
Dennis Eckner
Thibault Lhermusier
Lars Søndergaard
Beatriz Vaquerizo
Ole De Backer
Alaide Chieffo
Carl Kaulfersch
Charles Cornet
Smita Scholtz
Thomas Walther
César Morís
Thierry Lefèvre
Martin Czerny
Johannes Lammer
Daniel J. Blackman
Philipp Kahlert
Holger Schröfel
Eggebrecht, H
Vaquerizo, B
Moris, C
Bossone, E
Lammer, J
Czerny, M
Zierer, A
Schrofel, H
Kim, Wk
Walther, T
Scholtz, S
Rudolph, T
Hengstenberg, C
Kempfert, J
Spaziano, M
Lefevre, T
Bleiziffer, S
Schofer, J
Mehilli, J
Seiffert, M
Naber, C
Biancari, F
Eckner, D
Cornet, C
Lhermusier, T
Philippart, R
Siljander, A
Cerillo, Ag
Blackman, D
Chieffo, A
Kahlert, P
Czerwinska-Jelonkiewicz, K
Szymanski, P
Landes, U
Kornowski, R
D'Onofrio, A
Kaulfersch, C
Sondergaard, L
Mylotte, D
Mehta, Rh
De Backer, O
Source :
European Heart Journal. 39:676-684
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2017.

Abstract

Aims: Life-threatening complications occur during transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) which can require emergent cardiac surgery (ECS). Risks and outcomes of patients needing ECS during or immediately after TAVI are still unclear. Methods and results: Incidence, risk factors, management, and outcomes of patients requiring ECS during transfemoral (TF)-TAVI were analysed from a contemporary real-world multicentre registry. Between 2013 and 2016, 27 760 patients underwent TF-TAVI in 79 centres. Of these, 212 (0.76%) patients required ECS (age 82.4 ± 6.3 years, 67.5% females, logistic EuroSCORE: 17.1%, STS-score 5.8%). The risk of ECS declined from 2013 (1.07%) to 2014 (0.70%) but remained stable since. Annual TF-TAVI numbers have more than doubled from 2013 to 2016. Leading causes for ECS were left ventricular perforation by the guidewire (28.3%) and annular rupture (21.2%). Immediate procedural mortality ( 85 years [odds ratio (OR) 1.87, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) (1.02–3.45), P = 0.044], annular rupture [OR 1.96, 95% CI (0.94–4.10), P = 0.060], and immediate ECS [OR 3.12, 95% CI (1.07–9.11), P = 0.037]. One year of survival of the 114 patients surviving the in-hospital period was only 40.4%. Conclusion: Between 2014 and 2016, the need for ECS remained stable around 0.7%. Left ventricular guidewire perforation and annular rupture were the most frequent causes, accounting for almost half of ECS cases. Half of the patients could be salvaged by ECS—nevertheless, 1 year of all-cause mortality was high even in those ECS patients surviving the in-hospital period.

Details

ISSN :
15229645 and 0195668X
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f4566c7dc7925bbc531144ded66327b2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehx713