Aggressive tissue aortic valve replacement in younger patients and the risk of re-replacement: Implications from microsimulation analysis.

J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg

Division of Cardiac Surgery, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY. Electronic address:

Published: July 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Advances in transcatheter aortic valve replacement have sparked interest in using tissue valves for younger patients, as they may have more treatment options later on.
  • A microsimulation model was created to predict outcomes for patients who undergo tissue surgical aortic valve replacement, using data on annual mortality and risks of re-replacement.
  • Results showed that patients who receive a tissue valve at age 50 have a high likelihood of needing multiple re-replacements, with significant operative mortality rates for each subsequent surgery.

Article Abstract

Objective: Advances in transcatheter aortic valve replacement have led to the consideration of tissue aortic valve replacement in younger patients. Part of this enthusiasm is the presumption that younger patients would have more flexibility in future treatment options, such as a primary surgical aortic valve replacement followed later by transcatheter aortic valve replacement(s) (valve-in-valve), vice versa, or other permutations. We created a microsimulation model using published longevity of tissue valves to predict the outcomes of patients after primary tissue surgical aortic valve replacement.

Methods: The model calculated survival by incorporating annual mortality (Social Security Administration) and mortality from re-replacements (Society of Thoracic Surgeons) in patients with surgical aortic valve replacement. Freedom from reoperation for structural valve degeneration incorporated best published data to determine the annual risk of re-replacement for structural valve degeneration based on implant duration and stratified by patient age. A constant rate of re-replacement for nonstructural valve degeneration indications was also incorporated. Each simulation was performed for 50,000 individuals. Kaplan-Meier curves were generated to represent survival. All simulations were run within the MATLAB environment (The MathWorks, Inc, Natick, Mass).

Results: Earlier decades of life at primary surgical aortic valve replacement were associated with higher incidences of re-replacements and especially multiple re-replacements. For those patients receiving a primary tissue surgical aortic valve replacement at age 50 years, 57.2% will require a second valve, 18.0% will require a third valve, and 1.6% will require a fourth valve with average operative mortalities of 2.9%, 4.8%, and 7.3%, respectively. A 50-year-old patient at primary surgical aortic valve replacement has a 13.1% chance of re-replacement before turning 60 years of age.

Conclusions: Microsimulation incorporates changing hazards to estimate the risk of aortic valve re-replacement in patients undergoing tissue surgical aortic valve replacement and may be a starting point for patient education and health care economic planning.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2018.10.165DOI Listing

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