Abstract
Clinical outcomes of redo surgical aortic valve replacement (redo-SAVR) compared with valve-in-valve transcatheter aortic valve replacement (VIV-TAVR) are poorly understood. This study compared short- and midterm outcomes of patients undergoing isolated redo-SAVR vs VIV-TAVR after previous SAVR. A single-institutional review of the initial use of VIV-TAVR from 2012 to 2019 identified 273 patients undergoing VIV-TAVR (n= 187) or redo-SAVR (n= 86) after prior SAVR. Outcomes analysis included a univariate analysis and Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. The Society of Thoracic Surgeons predicted risk of mortality was higher for VIV-TAVR (6.3%; interquartile range [IQR], 3.6%-10.5%) vs redo-SAVR (4.2%; IQR, 2.4%-6.9%; P < .01). VIV-TAVR patients (76 years; IQR, 67.5-82.5 years) were older than redo-SAVR patients (64 years; IQR, 54-72; P < .01). Redo-SAVR and VIV-TAVR had similar early mortality (1.2% vs 1.6%, P= .92). Two redo-SAVR (2.3%) and 3 VIV-TAVR patients (1.6%) died 4.8 ± 0.5 years and 4.8 ± 1.5 months after discharge, respectively. Redo-SAVR had an increased stroke rate (7.0% vs 1.1%, P= .02). Postoperative mean valve gradients were similar between VIV-TAVR (14 mm Hg; IQR, 9-21 mm Hg) and redo-SAVR patients (12 mm Hg; IQR, 8-20 mm Hg; P= .08). Postprocedure transesophageal echocardiography showed at least mild aortic insufficiency for 24 VIV-TAVR patients (16%) and 2 redo-SAVR patients (2.9%) (P= .01). The cumulative incidence of aortic valve reintervention was 5.2% for the redo-SAVR patients and 28.5% for the VIV-TAVR patients (P= .07). After previous SAVR, redo-SAVR and VIV-TAVR can both be performed with acceptable operative results. Despite treating a high-risk patient population, we found redo-SAVR and VIV-TAVR both carry similar operative outcomes. Improved valve hemodynamics were observed in redo-SAVR patients compared with VIV-TAVR patients.
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