A multicentre evaluation of the autograft procedure for young patients undergoing aortic valve replacement: Update on the German Ross Registry

Hans Hinrich Sievers*, Ulrich Stierle, Efstratios I. Charitos, Johanna J.M. Takkenberg, Jürgen Hörer, Ruediger Lange, Ulrich Franke, Marc Albert, Armin Gorski, Rainer G. Leyh, Arlindo Riso, Jörg Sachweh, Anton Moritz, Roland Hetzer, Wolfgang Hemmer

*Corresponding author for this work
52 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Conventional aortic valve replacement (AVR) in young, active patients represents a suboptimal solution in terms of long-term survival, durability and quality of life. The aim of the present work is to present an update on the multicentre experience with the pulmonary autograft procedure in young, adult patients. METHODS: Between 1990-2013, 1779 adult patients (1339 males; 44.7 ± 11.6 years) underwent the pulmonary autograft procedure in 8 centres. All patients underwent prospective clinical and echocardiographic examinations annually. The mean follow-up was 8.3 ± 5.1 years (range 0-24.3 years) with a total cumulative follow-up of 14 288 years and 662 patients having a follow-up of at least 10 years. RESULTS: The early (30-day) mortality rate was 1.1% (n = 19). Late (>30 day) survival of the adult population was comparable with the ageand gender-matched general population (observed deaths: 101, expected deaths: 91; P = 0.29). Freedom from autograft reoperation at 5, 10 and 15 years was 96.8, 94.7 and 86.7%, respectively, whereas freedom from homograft reoperation was 97.6, 95.5 and 92.3%, respectively. The overall freedom from reoperation was 94.9, 91.1 and 82.7%, respectively. Longitudinal modelling of functional valve performance revealed a low (<5%) probability of a patient being in higher autograft regurgitation grades throughout the first decade. Similarly, excellent homograft function was observed throughout the first 15 years. CONCLUSION: The autograft principle results in postoperative long-term survival comparable with that of the age- and gender-matched general population and reoperation rates within the 1%/patient-year boundaries and should be considered in young, active patients who want to avoid the shortcomings of conventional prostheses.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery
Volume49
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)212-218
Number of pages7
ISSN1010-7940
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

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