Three-Year (<75 Years)Outcomes Low-Surgical-Risk FollowingSevere TAVR inAortic Younger Stenosis Patients

Thomas Modine, Didier Tchétché, Nicolas M. Van Mieghem, G. Michael Deeb, Stanley J. Chetcuti, Steven J. Yakubov, Paul Sorajja, Hemal Gada, Mubashir Mumtaz, Basel Ramlawi, Tanvir Bajwa, John Crouch, Paul S. Teirstein, Neal S. Kleiman, Ayman Iskander, Rodrigo Bagur, Michael W.A. Chu, Pierre Berthoumieu, Arnaud Sudre, Rik AdrichemSaki Ito, Jian Huang, Jeffrey J. Popma, John K. Forrest, Michael J. Reardon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is an alternative to surgery in patients with severe aortic stenosis, but data are limited on younger, low-risk patients. This analysis compares outcomes in low-surgical-risk patients aged <75 years receiving TAVR versus surgery. METHODS: The Evolut Low Risk Trial randomized 1414 low-risk patients to treatment with a supra-annular, self-expanding TAVR or surgery. We compared rates of all-cause mortality or disabling stroke, associated clinical outcomes, and bioprosthetic valve performance at 3 years between TAVR and surgery patients aged <75 years. RESULTS: In patients <75 years, 352 were randomized to TAVR and 351 to surgery. Mean age was 69.1±4.0 years (minimum 51 and maximum 74); Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality was 1.7±0.6%. At 3 years, all-cause mortality or disabling stroke for TAVR was 5.7% and 8.0% for surgery (P=0.241). Although there was no difference between TAVR and surgery in all-cause mortality, the incidence of disabling stroke was lower with TAVR (0.6%) than surgery (2.9%; P=0.019), while surgery was associated with a lower incidence of pacemaker implantation (7.1%) compared with TAVR (21.0%; P<0.001). Valve reintervention rates (TAVR 1.5%, surgery 1.5%, P=0.962) were low in both groups. Valve performance was significantly better with TAVR than surgery with lower mean aortic gradients (P<0.001) and lower rates of severe prosthesis-patient mismatch (P<0.001). Rates of valve thrombosis and endocarditis were similar between groups. There were no significant differences in rates of residual ≥moderate paravalvular regurgitation. CONCLUSIONS: Low-risk patients <75 years treated with supra-annular, self-expanding TAVR had comparable 3-year all-cause mortality and lower disabling stroke compared with patients treated with surgery. There was significantly better valve performance in patients treated with TAVR.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)e014018
JournalCirculation: Cardiovascular Interventions
Volume17
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2024

Keywords

  • aortic valve stenosis
  • humans
  • incidence
  • stroke
  • transcatheter aortic valve replacement

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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