Emil Johannes Ravn, Lytfi Krasniqi, Poul Erik Mortensen, Bo Juel Kjeldsen, Jens Lund, Oke Gerke, Morten Holdgaard Smerup, Ivy Susanne Modrau, Jordi Sanchez Dahl, Lars Peter Schødt Riber
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: The study aimed to compare long-term outcomes of the David and Yacoub valve-sparing aortic root replacement (VSARR) procedures in a nationwide, low-volume setting.
Methods: All patients undergoing elective VSARR in Denmark between January 2010 and April 2022 were identified using the Danish registries. The primary end-point was all-cause death. Secondary end-points included stroke, reoperation, a composite of death or reoperation, and long-term echocardiographic outcomes. Analyses were performed in both crude and propensity score-matched (PSM) populations and compared with outcomes from a control group comprised of all elective composite root replacement procedures performed at the contributing centres in the study period.
Results: A total of 160 patients underwent VSARR (median age; David vs Yacoub; 49.7 [SD 14.1] years vs 51.5 [SD 14.3] years; P = .42) with the David (n = 92, 57.5%; median follow-up 8.2 [SD 3.6] years) or Yacoub (n = 68, 42.5%; median follow-up 7.1 [SD 2.4] years) procedure. Ten-year all-cause death was similar (David 9.3% [95% CI: 2.3-15.2] vs Yacoub 8.8% [95% CI: 3.6-20.6]; log-rank P = .54). Reoperation rates (log-rank P = .12), stroke incidence (P = .41), and the composite end-point of death or reoperation (log-rank P = .63) were comparable, with consistent findings in the PSM cohort. Long-term echocardiographic follow-up demonstrated no difference in recurrent regurgitation, stenosis, or valve-related complications. Compared to elective composite root replacement (CRR) (n = 486), VSARR demonstrated lower rate of all-cause death (P = .027) and stroke (P = .026), while reoperation rate was higher (13.8% vs 4.3%; P < .001). However, the risk of reoperation was comparable between procedures when accounting for competing risk of death (log-rank P = .17).
Conclusions: Long-term outcomes following elective VSARR using the David and Yacoub procedure were comparable. VSARR was associated with lower risk of all-cause death and stroke compared to elective CRR, supporting the two VSARR procedures as durable options when performed in experienced centres with careful patient selection, even in low-volume settings.