Prevalence and prognostic implications of the Valve Academic Research Consortium-High Bleeding Risk criteria in patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation.
Davide Cao, Marco Sandri, Philippe Garot, Francesco Pelliccia, Francesco Radico, Vincenzo Pasceri, Samantha Sartori, George D Dangas, Roxana Mehran, Davide Capodanno, Marie-Claude Morice, Italo Porto, Fausto Biancari, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo, Francesco Saia, Giampaolo Luzi, Francesco Bedogni, Ignacio J Amat-Santos, Vincenzo De Marzo, Arnaldo Dimagli, Timo Mäkikallio, Eugenio Stabile, Mario García-Gómez, Luca Testa, Marco Barbanti, Corrado Tamburino, Franco Fabbiocchi, Federico Conrotto, Giuliano Costa, Carmen Spaccarotella, Andrea Macchione, Michele La Torre, Francesco Bendandi, Tatu Juvonen, Wojciech Wanha, Wojtec Wojakowski, Umberto Benedetto, Ciro Indolfi, David Hildick-Smith, Fabio Miraldi, Marco Zimarino, Giulio Stefanini
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The Valve Academic Research Consortium (VARC) recently proposed a definition of high bleeding risk (HBR) for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). This study aims to evaluate the prevalence and distribution of the VARC-HBR criteria and their ability to predict in-hospital bleeding.
Methods: Patients undergoing TAVI at 18 European sites between 2007 and 2022 and included in the Transfusion Requirements in Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (NCT03740425) registry were stratified into low, moderate, high or very high bleeding risk using the VARC-HBR criteria. The primary outcome was in-hospital major or life-threatening bleeding (VARC-2 definition).
Results: Among 8464 patients, bleeding risk was very high in 1966 (23.2%), high in 3311 (39.1%), moderate in 2075 (24.5%) and low in 1112 (13.1%). In-hospital bleeding occurred in 11.0% of those at low risk, compared with 17.2%, 20.0% and 22.2% of patients at moderate, high and very high risk (p<0.001). The association between VARC-HBR criteria and bleeding remained significant after adjustment for calendar time. At 2 years, the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events ranged from 13.8% in low-risk patients to 13.1%, 18.6% and 25.4% among those at moderate, high and very high risk (p<0.001). Mortality was higher after a bleeding event (HR 1.71, 95% CI 1.50 to 1.95), especially within the first 3 months (HR 2.88, 95% CI 2.33 to 3.56).
Conclusions: Up to 60% of patients undergoing TAVI are at high or very high bleeding risk. The VARC-HBR criteria identified those at greater risk of adverse events. In-hospital bleeding complications and long-term cardiovascular events increased progressively across VARC-HBR categories.
期刊介绍:
Heart is an international peer reviewed journal that keeps cardiologists up to date with important research advances in cardiovascular disease. New scientific developments are highlighted in editorials and put in context with concise review articles. There is one free Editor’s Choice article in each issue, with open access options available to authors for all articles. Education in Heart articles provide a comprehensive, continuously updated, cardiology curriculum.