Background: Indications for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) have gradually expanded since its introduction.

Aims: The aim was to analyze temporal trends in TAVI characteristics based on the experience of a high-volume academic center over the period of 10 years.

Methods: Five hundred and six consecutive (n = 506) patients with 1-year follow-up were divided into early (G1, years 2010-2013, n = 130), intermediate (G2, 2014-2016, n = 164) and recent (G3, 2017-2019, n = 212) experience groups.

Results: Patient's age remained constant over time (mean [SD]; G1 = 79.1 [7.1] years vs G2 = 79.1 [7.1] years vs G3 = 79.7 [6.6] years, P = 0.73) but surgical risk in G3 was lower (log Euroscore, median [IQR]: G1 = 14.0 [8.4-20.2] vs G2 = 12.0 [7.0-22.2] vs G3 = 5.1 [3.5-8.5]; P <0.001). Major/life-threatening bleeding (G1 = 26.9% vs G2 = 12.8% vs G3 = 9.4%; P <0.001), major vascular complications (G1 = 15.4% vs G2 = 8.5% vs G3 = 5.7%; P = 0.02) and moderate/severe paravalvular leak (G1 = 16.2% vs G2 = 11% vs G3 = 7.5%; P = 0.046) were decreasing with time. There was a significant drop in all-cause 1-year mortality in G3 (G1 = 20% vs G2 = 17.7% vs G3 = 9.1%; log rank = 0.01).

Conclusions: The age of TAVI recipients remained unchanged over the last decade. Decreasing surgical risk coupled with improvements in procedural technique and care resulted in fewer periprocedural complications and better 1-year survival.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.33963/KP.a2021.0030DOI Listing

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