TY - JOUR
T1 - Aortic Valve Surgery in Nonelderly Patients
T2 - Insights Gained From AVIATOR
AU - Aortic Valve Repair Research Network Investigators from the Heart Valve Society, Collaborators
AU - Lansac, Emmanuel
AU - Youssefi, Pouya
AU - de Heer, Frederiek
AU - Bavaria, Joseph
AU - De Kerchove, Laurent
AU - El-Hamamsy, Ismail
AU - Elkhoury, Gebrine
AU - Enriquez-Sarano, Maurice
AU - Jondeau, Laurent de Guillaume
AU - Kluin, Jolanda
AU - Pibarot, Philippe
AU - Schäfers, Hans Joachim
AU - Vanoverschelde, Jean Louis
AU - Takkenberg, Johanna J.M.
AU - Dinges, Christian
AU - Steindl, Johannes
AU - Ziller, Rosina
AU - Benkacem, Taoufik
AU - Coulon, Corinne
AU - Kaddouri, Fadoua
AU - de Meester, Christophe
AU - Pasquet, Agnès
AU - Nijs, Jan
AU - Van Mossevelde, Veerle
AU - Loeys, Bart
AU - Meuris, Bart
AU - Schepmans, Evi
AU - Van den Bossche, Klaartje
AU - Verbrugghe, Peter
AU - Goossens, Wenke
AU - Gutermann, Herbert
AU - Pettinari, Matteo
AU - Lenoir, Marien
AU - Noly, Pierre Emmanuel
AU - Tousch, Michael
AU - Shah, Pallav
AU - Boodhwani, Munir
AU - Rudez, Igor
AU - Baric, Davor
AU - Unic, Daniel
AU - Varvodic, Josip
AU - Gjorgijevska, Savica
AU - Vojacek, Jan
AU - Zacek, Pavel
AU - Karalko, Mikita
AU - Hlubocky, Jaroslav
AU - Novotny, Robert
AU - Slautin, Andrey
AU - Soliman, Said
AU - Arnaud-Crozat, Eric
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2019/12/1
Y1 - 2019/12/1
N2 - Aortic valve surgery in non-elderly patients represents a very challenging patient population. The younger the patient is at the point of aortic valve intervention, the longer their anticipated life expectancy will be, with longer exposure to valve-related complications and risk for re-operation. Although the latest international guidelines recommend aortic valve repair in patients with aortic valve insufficiency, what we see in the real world is that the vast majority of these aortic valves are replaced. However, current prosthetic valves has now been shown to lead to significant loss of life expectancy for non-elderly patients up to 50% for patients in their 40s undergoing mechanical aortic valve replacement. Bioprostheses carry an even worse long-term survival, with higher rates of re-intervention. The promise of trans-catheter valve-in-valve technology is accentuating the trend of bioprosthetic implantation in younger patients, without yet the appropriate evidence. In contrast, aortic valve repair has shown excellent outcomes in terms of quality of life, freedom from re-operation and freedom from major adverse valve-related events with similar life expectancy to general population as it is also found for the Ross procedure, the only available living valve substitute. We are at a time when the paradigm of aortic valve surgery needs to change for the better. To better serve our patients, we must acquire high quality real-world evidence from multiple centers globally – this is the vision of the AVIATOR registry and our common responsibility.
AB - Aortic valve surgery in non-elderly patients represents a very challenging patient population. The younger the patient is at the point of aortic valve intervention, the longer their anticipated life expectancy will be, with longer exposure to valve-related complications and risk for re-operation. Although the latest international guidelines recommend aortic valve repair in patients with aortic valve insufficiency, what we see in the real world is that the vast majority of these aortic valves are replaced. However, current prosthetic valves has now been shown to lead to significant loss of life expectancy for non-elderly patients up to 50% for patients in their 40s undergoing mechanical aortic valve replacement. Bioprostheses carry an even worse long-term survival, with higher rates of re-intervention. The promise of trans-catheter valve-in-valve technology is accentuating the trend of bioprosthetic implantation in younger patients, without yet the appropriate evidence. In contrast, aortic valve repair has shown excellent outcomes in terms of quality of life, freedom from re-operation and freedom from major adverse valve-related events with similar life expectancy to general population as it is also found for the Ross procedure, the only available living valve substitute. We are at a time when the paradigm of aortic valve surgery needs to change for the better. To better serve our patients, we must acquire high quality real-world evidence from multiple centers globally – this is the vision of the AVIATOR registry and our common responsibility.
KW - AVIATOR
KW - Aortic valve surgery
KW - Nonelderly patients
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85069951720&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1053/j.semtcvs.2019.05.033
DO - 10.1053/j.semtcvs.2019.05.033
M3 - Review article
C2 - 31229691
AN - SCOPUS:85069951720
SN - 1043-0679
VL - 31
SP - 643
EP - 649
JO - Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
JF - Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
IS - 4
ER -