AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assesses the feasibility, effectiveness, and safety of transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) in patients with radiation-induced aortic valve stenosis (RXT) compared to those with degenerative stenosis (NRXT).
  • Among 198 enrolled patients, 9.6% had a history of chest radiation, showing they were generally younger and had lower surgical risk but more complex thoracic anatomy.
  • TAVI demonstrated high success rates and acceptable safety outcomes in both groups, with the RXT group experiencing significantly lower mortality at six months compared to the NRXT group, suggesting TAVI is a viable treatment for RXT cases.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) feasibility, effectiveness and safety in radiation-induced aortic valve stenosis cases.

Methods: 198 consecutive patients referred for TAVI were prospectively enrolled. They were divided into two groups: patients with a history of chest radiation therapy with suspected radiation-induced valvular disease (RXT) and others with suspected degenerative aortic valve stenosis (NRXT). Procedural, early and mid-term clinical outcomes were compared.

Results: Of the 198 patients enrolled in our study, 9.6% qualified for inclusion in the RXT group. A comparison of baseline characteristics revealed that patients with RXT were younger than patients with NRXT (68.3 vs 82.5 years; p<0.05) and exhibited a lower surgical risk score (Euroscore: 7.1% vs 21.8%; p<0.05) and a higher frequency of hostile thorax and porcelain aorta (52.6% vs 28.5%; p<0.05; 63.2% vs 10.6%; p<0.05, respectively). In both groups, the implantation success rate was high and the 30-day safety end point acceptable (RXT: 94.7% and 83.3%; NRXT: 93.9% and 75.6%, respectively). At 6 months, overall mortality was significantly lower in the RXT group (0% vs 18%; p=0.048).

Conclusions: In patients suffering from radiation-induced aortic valve stenosis and contraindicated for surgery, TAVI is a promising approach, with high feasibility, acceptable risk, low mortality and high clinical effectiveness at mid-term follow-up.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4555069PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2015-000252DOI Listing

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