Cargando…

Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare treatment of moderate to severe symptomatic mitral regurgitation (MR) with either conventional surgery or the mitral valve edge-to-edge device (MitraClip®) in very elderly patients. The newly introduced MitraClip device has demonstrated promising acut...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Alozie, Anthony, Paranskaya, Liliya, Westphal, Bernd, Kaminski, Alexander, Sherif, Mohammad, Sindt, Magnus, Kische, Stephan, Schubert, Jochen, Diedrich, Doreen, Ince, Hüseyin, Steinhoff, Gustav, Öner, Alper
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5360063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28320316
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12872-017-0523-4
_version_ 1782516524068634624
author Alozie, Anthony
Paranskaya, Liliya
Westphal, Bernd
Kaminski, Alexander
Sherif, Mohammad
Sindt, Magnus
Kische, Stephan
Schubert, Jochen
Diedrich, Doreen
Ince, Hüseyin
Steinhoff, Gustav
Öner, Alper
author_facet Alozie, Anthony
Paranskaya, Liliya
Westphal, Bernd
Kaminski, Alexander
Sherif, Mohammad
Sindt, Magnus
Kische, Stephan
Schubert, Jochen
Diedrich, Doreen
Ince, Hüseyin
Steinhoff, Gustav
Öner, Alper
author_sort Alozie, Anthony
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare treatment of moderate to severe symptomatic mitral regurgitation (MR) with either conventional surgery or the mitral valve edge-to-edge device (MitraClip®) in very elderly patients. The newly introduced MitraClip device has demonstrated promising acute results in treating this patient cohort. Also noteworthy is the fact that patients who otherwise would have been denied surgery are increasingly referred for treatment with the MitraClip device. We sought to review our institutional experience, comparing outcomes in both surgical and MitraClip arms of treatment in the elderly population with symptomatic MR. METHODS: From October 2008 through October 2014, 136 consecutive patients aged ≥ 80 with moderate to severe symptomatic MR were scheduled for either conventional surgery or MitraClip intervention. 56 patients ≥ 80 were operated for symptomatic MR and 80 patients ≥ 80 were treated with the mitraClip device. Patients suitable for this study were identified from our hospital database. Patients ≥80 with moderate/severe symptomatic MR treated with either conventional surgery or the MitraClip device were eligible for our analysis. We compared the surgical patient cohort with the mitraClip patient cohort after eliminating patients that did not meet our inclusion criteria. Forty-two patients were identified from the conventional cohort who were then compared with 42 patients from the mitraClip cohort. Forty-two patients (50%) underwent mitral valve repair or replacement (40.5% functional MR, 59.5% organic/mixed MR) and 42 patients (50%) underwent MitraClip intervention (50% functional MR, 50% organic/mixed MR). Associated procedures in the conventional surgical group were myocardial revascularization 38%, pulmonary vein ablation 23.8%, left atrial appendage resection 52.4% and PFO occlusion 11.9%. RESULTS: Patients who underwent MitraClip treatment were though slightly older but the differences did not attain statistical significance (mean, 82.2 ± 1.65 vs 81.7 ± 1.35 years, p = 0,100), had lower LVEF (mean, 47.6 ± 14.2 vs 53.4 ± 14.3, p = 0.072), lower logistic EuroScore II (mean, 11.3 ± 5.63 vs 12.1 ± 10.6, p = 0.655) but higher STS risk score (mean, 11.8 ± 6.7 vs 8.1 ± 5.6, p = 0.008) respectively compared to surgical patients. Procedural success was 100% vs 96% in surgery and MitraClip groups respectively. Thirty -day mortality was 7.1% vs 4.8% (p = 1.000) in surgery and MitraClip group respectively. Residual postoperative MR ≥2 at discharge was present in none of the patients treated surgically, whereas this was the case in 10 (23.8%) patients treated with the MitraClip device. At 1 year a cumulative number of four (9.52%) patients died in the surgical group vs 9 (21.4%) patients who died in the MitraClip group. CONCLUSIONS: Elderly patients presenting with moderate to severe symptomatic MR may either be treated by conventional surgery or with the MitraClip device with acceptable acute outcomes. The decision for treatment with the MitraClip device should not depend on age alone rather on cumulative risk of conventional surgery. Concomitant cardiac pathologies, often times treated simultaneously during surgery for symptomatic MR may be omitted, if patients are scheduled outright to MitraClip treatment. The effect of concomitant cardiac pathologies left untreated at the time of interventional mitral valve repair on outcome after MitraClip therapy remain widely unknown.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5360063
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53600632017-03-24 Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience Alozie, Anthony Paranskaya, Liliya Westphal, Bernd Kaminski, Alexander Sherif, Mohammad Sindt, Magnus Kische, Stephan Schubert, Jochen Diedrich, Doreen Ince, Hüseyin Steinhoff, Gustav Öner, Alper BMC Cardiovasc Disord Research Article BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare treatment of moderate to severe symptomatic mitral regurgitation (MR) with either conventional surgery or the mitral valve edge-to-edge device (MitraClip®) in very elderly patients. The newly introduced MitraClip device has demonstrated promising acute results in treating this patient cohort. Also noteworthy is the fact that patients who otherwise would have been denied surgery are increasingly referred for treatment with the MitraClip device. We sought to review our institutional experience, comparing outcomes in both surgical and MitraClip arms of treatment in the elderly population with symptomatic MR. METHODS: From October 2008 through October 2014, 136 consecutive patients aged ≥ 80 with moderate to severe symptomatic MR were scheduled for either conventional surgery or MitraClip intervention. 56 patients ≥ 80 were operated for symptomatic MR and 80 patients ≥ 80 were treated with the mitraClip device. Patients suitable for this study were identified from our hospital database. Patients ≥80 with moderate/severe symptomatic MR treated with either conventional surgery or the MitraClip device were eligible for our analysis. We compared the surgical patient cohort with the mitraClip patient cohort after eliminating patients that did not meet our inclusion criteria. Forty-two patients were identified from the conventional cohort who were then compared with 42 patients from the mitraClip cohort. Forty-two patients (50%) underwent mitral valve repair or replacement (40.5% functional MR, 59.5% organic/mixed MR) and 42 patients (50%) underwent MitraClip intervention (50% functional MR, 50% organic/mixed MR). Associated procedures in the conventional surgical group were myocardial revascularization 38%, pulmonary vein ablation 23.8%, left atrial appendage resection 52.4% and PFO occlusion 11.9%. RESULTS: Patients who underwent MitraClip treatment were though slightly older but the differences did not attain statistical significance (mean, 82.2 ± 1.65 vs 81.7 ± 1.35 years, p = 0,100), had lower LVEF (mean, 47.6 ± 14.2 vs 53.4 ± 14.3, p = 0.072), lower logistic EuroScore II (mean, 11.3 ± 5.63 vs 12.1 ± 10.6, p = 0.655) but higher STS risk score (mean, 11.8 ± 6.7 vs 8.1 ± 5.6, p = 0.008) respectively compared to surgical patients. Procedural success was 100% vs 96% in surgery and MitraClip groups respectively. Thirty -day mortality was 7.1% vs 4.8% (p = 1.000) in surgery and MitraClip group respectively. Residual postoperative MR ≥2 at discharge was present in none of the patients treated surgically, whereas this was the case in 10 (23.8%) patients treated with the MitraClip device. At 1 year a cumulative number of four (9.52%) patients died in the surgical group vs 9 (21.4%) patients who died in the MitraClip group. CONCLUSIONS: Elderly patients presenting with moderate to severe symptomatic MR may either be treated by conventional surgery or with the MitraClip device with acceptable acute outcomes. The decision for treatment with the MitraClip device should not depend on age alone rather on cumulative risk of conventional surgery. Concomitant cardiac pathologies, often times treated simultaneously during surgery for symptomatic MR may be omitted, if patients are scheduled outright to MitraClip treatment. The effect of concomitant cardiac pathologies left untreated at the time of interventional mitral valve repair on outcome after MitraClip therapy remain widely unknown. BioMed Central 2017-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5360063/ /pubmed/28320316 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12872-017-0523-4 Text en © The Author(s). 2017 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Alozie, Anthony
Paranskaya, Liliya
Westphal, Bernd
Kaminski, Alexander
Sherif, Mohammad
Sindt, Magnus
Kische, Stephan
Schubert, Jochen
Diedrich, Doreen
Ince, Hüseyin
Steinhoff, Gustav
Öner, Alper
Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
title Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
title_full Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
title_fullStr Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
title_full_unstemmed Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
title_short Clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus MitraClip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
title_sort clinical outcomes of conventional surgery versus mitraclip® therapy for moderate to severe symptomatic mitral valve regurgitation in the elderly population: an institutional experience
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5360063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28320316
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12872-017-0523-4
work_keys_str_mv AT alozieanthony clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT paranskayaliliya clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT westphalbernd clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT kaminskialexander clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT sherifmohammad clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT sindtmagnus clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT kischestephan clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT schubertjochen clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT diedrichdoreen clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT incehuseyin clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT steinhoffgustav clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience
AT oneralper clinicaloutcomesofconventionalsurgeryversusmitracliptherapyformoderatetoseveresymptomaticmitralvalveregurgitationintheelderlypopulationaninstitutionalexperience