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SNOWMASS, COLO. – Valve-sparing root replacement has emerged as the procedure of choice in patients with isolated aortic root disease and a normally functioning aortic valve, according to Dr. Thoralf M. Sundt III.
"The valve-sparing root operations, in contrast to some of the other things we surgeons have come up with over the last decade or so, are increasing in popularity. They’re more and more commonly done, and that’s a good sign. I think the marketplace has spoken and this is clearly a good operation. It’s an operation that can be learned, and surgeons can do it with good results," he said at the Annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass.
Valve-sparing root replacement (VSRR) spares a patient from the complications associated with lifelong anticoagulation for a mechanical valve, and the durability of VSRR appears to be superior to that of third-generation bioprostheses, the surgeon added.
"They’re holding up pretty well. The outcomes approach those with mechanical valves," said Dr. Sundt, chief of cardiac surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital and professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Moreover, he continued, VSRR has another big advantage over bioprosthetic valves: "If you have to re-operate, it’s a whole lot more fun to do so on someone who’s had a VSRR and put a new biologic valve inside a native annulus than it is to try to take out that old bioprosthesis and put a new bioprosthesis in."
A meta-analysis of 11 studies comparing VSRR with total root replacement in patients with Marfan syndrome concluded that composite valve-related event rates for the two surgical strategies were not significantly different. The thromboembolic event rate was 0.3% per year in VSRR-treated patients, significantly lower than the still-quite-reasonable 0.7% per year rate after total root replacement (Heart 2011;97:955-8).
A recent study by surgeons at Stanford (Calif.) University gave VSRR a thumbs up regarding mid-term durability of outcomes through 6 years of follow-up, with a mean 2.9-year and maximum 6-year follow-up. The series included 75 patients with bicuspid aortic valve disease treated by VSRR.
Six-year actuarial survival was 99%, with 90% freedom from reoperation and no strokes. Thirty-one percent of patients had 2+ aortic regurgitation preoperatively; at echocardiographic follow-up a mean of 2.9 years post surgery, only a couple of patients had 2+ aortic regurgitation and no one was more severely affected. The Stanford investigators plan to update their results when follow-up reaches 10 years or more (J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. Dec. 20, 2012 [doi:10.1016/j.jtcvs.2012.11.043]).
The VSRR was developed by Dr. Tirone David of the University of Toronto. The procedure involves skeletonizing the root while preserving the leaflets and their attachments to the aortic wall. The aortic valve is then reimplanted inside a tubular Dacron graft, and then the coronary arteries are reimplanted.
"It’s probably the neatest development in terms of surgical options for the aortic valve in a long time," Dr. Sundt said.
He reported having no financial conflicts.
SNOWMASS, COLO. – Valve-sparing root replacement has emerged as the procedure of choice in patients with isolated aortic root disease and a normally functioning aortic valve, according to Dr. Thoralf M. Sundt III.
"The valve-sparing root operations, in contrast to some of the other things we surgeons have come up with over the last decade or so, are increasing in popularity. They’re more and more commonly done, and that’s a good sign. I think the marketplace has spoken and this is clearly a good operation. It’s an operation that can be learned, and surgeons can do it with good results," he said at the Annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass.
Valve-sparing root replacement (VSRR) spares a patient from the complications associated with lifelong anticoagulation for a mechanical valve, and the durability of VSRR appears to be superior to that of third-generation bioprostheses, the surgeon added.
"They’re holding up pretty well. The outcomes approach those with mechanical valves," said Dr. Sundt, chief of cardiac surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital and professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Moreover, he continued, VSRR has another big advantage over bioprosthetic valves: "If you have to re-operate, it’s a whole lot more fun to do so on someone who’s had a VSRR and put a new biologic valve inside a native annulus than it is to try to take out that old bioprosthesis and put a new bioprosthesis in."
A meta-analysis of 11 studies comparing VSRR with total root replacement in patients with Marfan syndrome concluded that composite valve-related event rates for the two surgical strategies were not significantly different. The thromboembolic event rate was 0.3% per year in VSRR-treated patients, significantly lower than the still-quite-reasonable 0.7% per year rate after total root replacement (Heart 2011;97:955-8).
A recent study by surgeons at Stanford (Calif.) University gave VSRR a thumbs up regarding mid-term durability of outcomes through 6 years of follow-up, with a mean 2.9-year and maximum 6-year follow-up. The series included 75 patients with bicuspid aortic valve disease treated by VSRR.
Six-year actuarial survival was 99%, with 90% freedom from reoperation and no strokes. Thirty-one percent of patients had 2+ aortic regurgitation preoperatively; at echocardiographic follow-up a mean of 2.9 years post surgery, only a couple of patients had 2+ aortic regurgitation and no one was more severely affected. The Stanford investigators plan to update their results when follow-up reaches 10 years or more (J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. Dec. 20, 2012 [doi:10.1016/j.jtcvs.2012.11.043]).
The VSRR was developed by Dr. Tirone David of the University of Toronto. The procedure involves skeletonizing the root while preserving the leaflets and their attachments to the aortic wall. The aortic valve is then reimplanted inside a tubular Dacron graft, and then the coronary arteries are reimplanted.
"It’s probably the neatest development in terms of surgical options for the aortic valve in a long time," Dr. Sundt said.
He reported having no financial conflicts.
SNOWMASS, COLO. – Valve-sparing root replacement has emerged as the procedure of choice in patients with isolated aortic root disease and a normally functioning aortic valve, according to Dr. Thoralf M. Sundt III.
"The valve-sparing root operations, in contrast to some of the other things we surgeons have come up with over the last decade or so, are increasing in popularity. They’re more and more commonly done, and that’s a good sign. I think the marketplace has spoken and this is clearly a good operation. It’s an operation that can be learned, and surgeons can do it with good results," he said at the Annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass.
Valve-sparing root replacement (VSRR) spares a patient from the complications associated with lifelong anticoagulation for a mechanical valve, and the durability of VSRR appears to be superior to that of third-generation bioprostheses, the surgeon added.
"They’re holding up pretty well. The outcomes approach those with mechanical valves," said Dr. Sundt, chief of cardiac surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital and professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Moreover, he continued, VSRR has another big advantage over bioprosthetic valves: "If you have to re-operate, it’s a whole lot more fun to do so on someone who’s had a VSRR and put a new biologic valve inside a native annulus than it is to try to take out that old bioprosthesis and put a new bioprosthesis in."
A meta-analysis of 11 studies comparing VSRR with total root replacement in patients with Marfan syndrome concluded that composite valve-related event rates for the two surgical strategies were not significantly different. The thromboembolic event rate was 0.3% per year in VSRR-treated patients, significantly lower than the still-quite-reasonable 0.7% per year rate after total root replacement (Heart 2011;97:955-8).
A recent study by surgeons at Stanford (Calif.) University gave VSRR a thumbs up regarding mid-term durability of outcomes through 6 years of follow-up, with a mean 2.9-year and maximum 6-year follow-up. The series included 75 patients with bicuspid aortic valve disease treated by VSRR.
Six-year actuarial survival was 99%, with 90% freedom from reoperation and no strokes. Thirty-one percent of patients had 2+ aortic regurgitation preoperatively; at echocardiographic follow-up a mean of 2.9 years post surgery, only a couple of patients had 2+ aortic regurgitation and no one was more severely affected. The Stanford investigators plan to update their results when follow-up reaches 10 years or more (J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. Dec. 20, 2012 [doi:10.1016/j.jtcvs.2012.11.043]).
The VSRR was developed by Dr. Tirone David of the University of Toronto. The procedure involves skeletonizing the root while preserving the leaflets and their attachments to the aortic wall. The aortic valve is then reimplanted inside a tubular Dacron graft, and then the coronary arteries are reimplanted.
"It’s probably the neatest development in terms of surgical options for the aortic valve in a long time," Dr. Sundt said.
He reported having no financial conflicts.
EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE CARDIOVASCULAR CONFERENCE AT SNOWMASS