Abstract

Paravalvular aortic regurgitation (PVAR) after balloon-expandable transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) remains difficult to quantify, and the utility of the AR index (ARi) to create a composite aortic insufficiency (CAI) score was an important advance. Heart rate (HR) influences the ARi but the clinical relevance of this phenomenon remains poorly appreciated. We sought to validate a new composite heart-rate-adjusted haemodynamic-echocardiographic aortic insufficiency (CHAI) score in the prognostic evaluation of PVAR after balloon-expandable TAVI. The severity of PVAR was assessed immediately post TAVI by transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE) with simultaneous assessment of transcatheter haemodynamics. A total of 303 patients were studied. The CHAI score, incorporating the HR-adjusted diastolic-delta (HRA-DD, the difference between left ventricular and aortic diastolic pressures/HR*80), had a greater discriminatory value for one-year mortality than both PVAR by TOE (p=0.0018) and the previously proposed CAI score, based on the ARi without HR adjustment (p=0.0029). The CHAI score also better stratified percentage increases in left ventricular systolic chamber dimensions at one month and serum natriuretic peptide levels at one to three months. Prognostication of PVAR in the intermediate range of echocardiographic severity remains unreliable and is greatly enhanced by the integration of heart-rate-adjusted transcatheter haemodynamics.

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