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Elderly
patients in need of heart valve replacements
have alternative to surgery
June, 2010--Doctors at the University Heart
Center in Hamburg, Germany successfully used
transcatheter valve-in-valve implantation in
elderly patients with degenerated
bioprostheses in aortic and mitral position.
This minimally invasive procedure was used
as an alternative treatment option for
patients who were at high surgical risk.
Full details of the study are available in
the June issue of Catheterization and
Cardiovascular Interventions, a journal
published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of
The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography
and Interventions.
Recently, heart valve replacement surgery
made headlines after broadcast journalist,
Barbara Walters, underwent the procedure
last month.
Each year more than 300,000 patients
worldwide have this surgery to repair
problematic or diseased heart valves.
The replacement valves can be mechanical, of
which modern versions can last indefinitely,
or tissue (xenograft) valves that on average
last 15 years. With mechanical valves,
patients must also be treated with
anticoagulant drugs.
However, reoperation which is the standard
treatment to replace degenerated valves, is
not always an option for patients who are at
greater morbidity risk due to advanced age
and other compounding issues such as renal
dysfunction.
In the current study, Moritz Seiffert, M.D.,
and colleagues report on their experience
with transcatheter valve-in-valve
implantation in 5 patients with significant
xenograft degeneration of 15.4 years after
aortic (n=4) and mitral (n=1) valve
replacement.
The mean age of patients was 82 years and
predicted operative mortality was 55.8%
based on the European System for Cardiac
Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE).
Successful transcatheter valve-in-valve
implantation was performed in all patients
through a transapical access with a 23-mm
Edwards Sapien valve deployed into the
degenerated valve.
Post-procedure results show the mean trans-valvular
gradients were reduced from 31.2 to 19.0 mm
Hg in the aortic location and 9 to 3 mm Hg
in the mitral position. Doctors did not
report any significant regurgitation
(backwards blood flow).
Two high-risk patients expired within 30
days due to low cardiac output and acute
hemorrhage, respectively. One of the deaths
occurred in a patient who presented with a
EuroSCORE of 88.9%.
"Transcatheter valve-in-valve implantation
offers an alternative treatment option for
elderly patients who have disproportional
operative risks," said Dr. Seiffert.
The doctors highlight that reoperative valve
surgery was not an option in these
candidates and valve-in-valve implantation
turned out to be a valuable bail-out
procedure.
"As the aged population continues to grow, a
minimally-invasive procedure such as
transcatheter valve-in-valve implantation is
a promising alternative," concluded Dr.
Seiffert.
"However adequate patient selection and an
interdisciplinary approach are crucial to
the success of this procedure."
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