Factors associated with the development of aortic valve regurgitation over time after two different techniques of valve-sparing aortic root surgery

Thorsten Hanke, Efstratios I. Charitos, Ulrich Stierle, Derek Robinson, Armin Gorski, Hans H. Sievers*, Martin Misfeld

*Corresponding author for this work
80 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective: Early results after aortic valve-sparing root reconstruction are excellent. Longer-term follow-up, especially with regard to aortic valve function, is required for further judgment of these techniques. Methods: Between July of 1993 and September of 2006, 108 consecutive patients (mean age 53.0 ± 15.8 years) underwent the Yacoub operation (group Y) and 83 patients underwent the David operation (group D). Innovative multilevel hierarchic modeling methods were used to analyze aortic regurgitation over time. Results: In general, aortic regurgitation increased with time in both groups. Factors associated with the development of a significant increase in aortic regurgitation were Marfan syndrome, concomitant cusp intervention, and preoperative aortic anulus dimension. In Marfan syndrome, the initial aortic regurgitation was higher in group Y versus group D (0.56 aortic regurgitation vs 0.29 aortic regurgitation, P = .049), whereas the mean annual progression rate of aortic regurgitation was marginally higher in group Y (0.132 aortic regurgitation vs 0.075 aortic regurgitation, P = .1). Concomitant cusp intervention was associated with a significant aortic regurgitation increase in both groups (P < .0001). There was a trend that smaller preoperative aortic annulus diameters in group D and larger diameters in group Y were associated with increased aortic regurgitation over time. Conclusion: In regard to aortic regurgitation grade over time, patients with Marfan syndrome and a large preoperative aortic annulus diameter were better treated with the reimplantation technique, whereas those with a smaller diameter were better treated with the remodeling technique. Concomitant free-edge plication of prolapsing cusps was disadvantageous in both groups. Considering these factors may serve to improve the aortic valve longevity after valve-sparing aortic root surgery.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
Volume137
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)314-319
Number of pages6
ISSN0022-5223
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 02.2009

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