AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the characteristics and outcomes of hemodialysis patients with severe aortic stenosis, revealing a high mortality rate compared to nonhemodialysis patients.
  • Among the 405 hemodialysis patients, those receiving initial aortic valve replacement (AVR) had significantly lower 5-year death rates compared to those who followed a conservative treatment approach.
  • However, hemodialysis patients experienced a higher rate of deaths related to the valve procedure itself, especially within the first six months post-surgery, highlighting the complex risks involved in their treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: Characteristics and prognosis of hemodialysis patients with severe aortic stenosis have not yet been well defined.

Methods And Results: The CURRENT AS (contemporary outcomes after surgery and medical treatment in patients with severe aortic stenosis) registry, a Japanese multicenter registry, enrolled 3815 consecutive patients with severe aortic stenosis. There were 405 hemodialysis patients (initial aortic valve replacement [AVR] group: N=135 [33.3%], and conservative group: N=270) and 3410 nonhemodialysis patients (initial AVR group: N=1062 [31.1%], and conservative group: N=2348). The median follow-up duration after the index echocardiography was 1361 days, with 90% follow-up rate at 2 years. The cumulative 5-year incidence of all-cause death was significantly higher in hemodialysis patients than in nonhemodialysis patients in both the entire cohort (71% versus 40%, <0.001) and in the initial AVR group (63.2% versus 17.9%, <0.001). Among hemodialysis patients, the initial AVR group as compared with the conservative group was associated with significantly lower cumulative 5-year incidences of all-cause death (60.6% versus 75.5%, <0.001) and sudden death (10.2% versus 31.7%, <0.001). Nevertheless, the rate of aortic valve procedure-related death, which predominantly occurred within 6 months of the AVR procedure, was markedly higher in the hemodialysis patients than in the nonhemodialysis patients (21.2% and 2.3%, <0.001).

Conclusions: Among hemodialysis patients with severe aortic stenosis, the initial AVR strategy as compared with the conservative strategy was associated with significantly lower long-term mortality risk, particularly the risk for sudden death, although the effect size for the survival benefit of the initial AVR strategy was smaller than that in the nonhemodialysis patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5586262PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.116.004961DOI Listing

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