Abstract

We compared the midterm outcome after aortic valve replacement with the Freestyle stentless bioprosthesis for the full-root or subcoronary implantation technique, while adjusting for patient and disease characteristics by a propensity score. Between 1996 and 2005, 1,014 patients underwent aortic valve replacement with the stentless Medtronic Freestyle bioprosthesis, 168 using full-root technique. Based on a saturated propensity score, 148 matched pairs were created. Mean age of the 296 patients was 73 +/- 3 years. Mean follow-up time was 32 +/- 30 months (maximum, 116 months). Operative mortality was 4.7% and 2.7% (p = 0.36) in the full-root and subcoronary groups, respectively. Freedom from reoperation, prosthetic valve endocarditis, major bleeding, and thromboembolism after 9 years was 98% +/- 1% and 90% +/- 7% (p = 0.38), 95% +/- 3% and 92% +/- 7% (p = 0.76), 72% +/- 21% and 98% +/- 2% (p = 0.12), and 75% +/- 8% and 84% +/- 7% (p = 0.28), for full-root and subcoronary groups, respectively. Survival rates after 9 years were 34% +/- 24% and 33% +/- 11% (p = 0.46), for the full-root and subcoronary groups, respectively. Patients in the full-root group received larger valve sizes (p = 0.03), and the mean transprosthetic gradients at discharge were significantly lower for each valve size. Nevertheless, during follow-up, peak gradients decreased to a greater extent in patients presenting high peak gradients (>36 mm Hg) at discharge. As risk-adjusted comparison of both implantation techniques did not reveal any differences regarding operative and midterm outcomes, full-root replacement can be liberally performed in patients with small aortic roots, annuloaortic ectasia, or requiring replacement of ascending aorta.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call