Fleck Tatiana M, Koinig Herbert, Czerny Martin, Hutschala Doris, Wolner Ernst, Ehrlich Marek, Grabenwoger Martin
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Medical University of Vienna, AKH Vienna, Wahringer Gurterl 18-20, 1090 Vienna, Austria.
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2004 Aug;26(2):342-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ejcts.2004.04.025.
This retrospective study evaluates, if recent refinements in peri-operative management, have an impact on clinical outcome of patients undergoing elective repair of their ascending thoracic aorta.
One hundred sixty five (n = 165) consecutive patients were operated during a 7 year period at our department. The cohort was divided in an early group I (from Jan 1997 to Dec 1999, n = 75) and a late group II (from Jan 2000 to Jan 2003, n = 90). The mean age was 60.9+/-13.1 years in group I versus 58.1+/-13.6 years in group II. In group I 50 patients (66.6%) underwent replacement of the ascending thoracic aorta alone, 17 patients (22.6%) received a composite graft, 8 patients (10.6%) had an additional aortic valve replacement and 14 patients (18.6%) needed concomitant coronary artery bypass grafting. In group II the procedures were as follows: interposition graft alone in 58 patients (64.4%), composite graft in 26 patients (28.8%), aortic valve replacement in 6 (6.6%) and CABG in 11 patients (12.2%).
Overall hospital mortality for the entire cohort was 6.6% (11/165) with no significant differences between the early and late group with 6.6% (5/75) and 6.6% (6/90), respectively, P = 0.985. Causes were multi organ failure in 63.3% (n = 7), stroke in 9% (n = 1) myocardial infarction in 18.1% (n = 2) and refractory bleeding in 9% (n = 1). Concomitant CABG, repair of the aortic valve and composite graft, emerged as independent risk factor for mortality in multivariate logistic regression analysis with P = 0.001. Differences, became apparent in ICU as well as hospital stay with a median ICU stay in group I of 7.1+/-12.9 days versus 4.4+/-6.8 days in group II, and median hospital stay of 16.7+/-5.3 days versus 9.5+/-8.4 days for group I and II, P < 0.05, respectively. Furthermore through the implementation of blood conservation techniques, a substantial reduction of transfusion requirements could be achieved (PRBC from 3.2+/-4 to 1.1+/-1.7 units, FFP 5.2+/-3 to 2.3+/-0.5 units, Platelets from 1.3+/-2 to 0.3+/-0.07 units).
Even with the implementation of various refinements in surgical and anaesthetic techniques, the current risk of mortality for ascending aortic aneurysm repair has not changed in the last 7 years. However, shortened ICU and hospital stays as well as diminished usage of blood derivates are mainly the result of a more aggressive and improved peri- and post-operative management due to economic considerations.