Staging Cardiac Damage in Patients With Symptomatic Aortic Valve Stenosis

E. Mara Vollema, Mohammed R. Amanullah, Arnold C.T. Ng, Pieter van der Bijl, Francesca Prevedello, Yoong Kong Sin, Edgard A. Prihadi, Nina Ajmone Marsan, Zee Pin Ding, Philippe Généreux, Philippe Pibarot, Martin B. Leon, Jagat Narula, See Hooi Ewe, Victoria Delgado, Jeroen J. Bax

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

102 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: In severe aortic stenosis (AS), patients often show extra-aortic valvular injury. Recently, a new staging system for severe AS has been proposed on the basis of the extent of cardiac damage. Objectives: The present study evaluated the prevalence and prognostic impact of these different stages of cardiac damage in a large, real-world, multicenter cohort of symptomatic severe AS patients. Methods: From the ongoing registries from 2 academic institutions, a total of 1,189 symptomatic severe AS patients were selected and retrospectively analyzed. According to the extent of cardiac damage on echocardiography, patients were classified as Stage 0 (no cardiac damage), Stage 1 (left ventricular damage), Stage 2 (mitral valve or left atrial damage), Stage 3 (tricuspid valve or pulmonary artery vasculature damage), or Stage 4 (right ventricular damage). Patients were followed for all-cause mortality and combined endpoint (all-cause mortality, stroke, and cardiac-related hospitalization). Results: On the basis of the proposed classification, 8% of patients were classified as Stage 0, 24% as Stage 1, 49% as Stage 2, 7% as Stage 3, and 12% as Stage 4. On multivariable analysis, cardiac damage was independently associated with all-cause mortality and combined outcome, although this was mainly determined by Stages 3 and 4. Conclusions: In this large multicenter cohort of symptomatic severe AS patients, stage of cardiac injury as classified by a novel staging system was independently associated with all-cause mortality and combined endpoint, although this seemed to be predominantly driven by tricuspid valve or pulmonary artery vasculature damage (Stage 3) and right ventricular dysfunction (Stage 4).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)538-549
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of the American College of Cardiology
Volume74
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 Jul 2019

Keywords

  • aortic stenosis
  • cardiac damage
  • classification
  • prognosis
  • staging

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