AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the relationship between low left ventricular stroke volume index (LVSVI) 30 days after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and survival rates, hypothesizing that steady-state LVSVI is linked to 1-year mortality.
  • - Analyzing data from 238 TAVR patients, the results show that patients with normalized LVSVI post-TAVR had significantly lower 1-year mortality rates compared to those with low flow, indicating LVSVI as a potential marker for patient outcomes.
  • - The findings suggest that LVSVI at 30 days post-TAVR can predict 1-year mortality and highlight the need for further research to explore its potential as a

Article Abstract

Background: Adverse cardiac events are common following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). Our aim was to investigate the low left ventricular stroke volume index (LVSVI) 30 days after TAVR as an early echocardiographic marker of survival.

Hypothesis: Steady-state (30-day) LVSVI after TAVR is associated with 1-year mortality.

Methods: A single-center retrospective analysis of all patients undergoing TAVR from 2017 to 2019. Baseline and 30-day post-TAVR echocardiographic LVSVI were calculated. Patients were stratified by pre-TAVR transaortic gradient, surgical risk, and change in transvalvular flow following TAVR.

Results: This analysis focuses on 238 patients treated with TAVR. The 1-year mortality rate was 9% and 124 (52%) patients had normal flow post-TAVR. Of those with pre-TAVR low flow, 67% of patients did not normalize LVSVI at 30 days. The 30-day normal flow was associated with lower 1-year mortality when compared to low flow (4% vs. 14%, p = .007). This association remained significant after adjusting for known predictors of risk (adjusted odds ratio [OR] of 3.45, 95% confidence interval: 1.02-11.63 [per 1 ml/m decrease], p = .046). Normalized transvalvular flow following TAVR was associated with reduced mortality (8%) when compared to those with persistent (15%) or new-onset low flow (12%) (p = .01).

Conclusions: LVSVI at 30 days following TAVR is an early echocardiographic predictor of 1-year mortality and identifies patients with worse intermediate outcomes. More work is needed to understand if this short-term imaging marker might represent a novel therapeutic target.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9849436PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clc.23937DOI Listing

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