Barreiro Christopher J, Patel Nishant D, Fitton Torin P, Williams Jason A, Bonde Pramod N, Chan Vincent, Alejo Diane E, Gott Vincent L, Baumgartner William A
Division of Cardiac Surgery, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institution, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
Circulation. 2005 Aug 30;112(9 Suppl):I443-7. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.104.526046.
The impact of mitral regurgitation (MR) on elderly patients (> or = 70 years) undergoing isolated aortic valve replacement (AVR) is not clearly defined. This study investigates the long-term effects of preoperative, moderate MR on survival and functional outcome in elderly AVR patients.
A retrospective review identified 408 consecutive elderly patients who underwent isolated AVR from January 1983 to February 2004. The pathologic etiology of MR was determined on preoperative echocardiogram, and patients were stratified into no/mild MR (Group I; n = 338) versus moderate MR (Group II; n = 70). Follow-up was 95.1% complete. Functional outcome was evaluated using the Short Form-12 questionnaire. On univariate analysis, Groups I and II differed in incidence of previous myocardial infarction (13.9% versus 28.6%; P = 0.004), hyperlipidemia (18.7% versus 33.3%; P = 0.009), and congestive heart failure (50.0% versus 70.0%; P = 0.002). On multivariate analysis, moderate MR was an independent risk factor impacting long-term survival (P = 0.04). Actuarial survival at 1, 5, and 10 years for Group I was 93.8%, 73.3%, and 40.1% versus 92.3%, 58.2%, and 14.6% for Group II (P = 0.04). Available postoperative echocardiograms for Group II (n = 37) demonstrated improvement in MR in 81.8% of functional MR patients. However, MR persisted or worsened in 65.4% of patients with intrinsic mitral valve disease (myxomatous, calcific, or ischemic MR). Functional outcomes showed 77% of Group I versus 78.6% of Group II rated their health as good to excellent post-AVR.
Moderate MR is an independent risk factor impacting long-term survival in elderly patients undergoing AVR. Therefore, patients with intrinsic mitral valve disease should be considered for concomitant MV surgery.
二尖瓣反流(MR)对接受单纯主动脉瓣置换术(AVR)的老年患者(≥70岁)的影响尚不明确。本研究调查术前中度MR对老年AVR患者生存和功能结局的长期影响。
一项回顾性研究纳入了1983年1月至2004年2月期间连续接受单纯AVR的408例老年患者。根据术前超声心动图确定MR的病理病因,患者被分为无/轻度MR组(I组;n = 338)和中度MR组(II组;n = 70)。随访完成率为95.1%。使用简短健康调查问卷-12评估功能结局。单因素分析显示,I组和II组在既往心肌梗死发生率(13.9%对28.6%;P = 0.004)、高脂血症(18.7%对33.3%;P = 0.009)和充血性心力衰竭(50.0%对70.0%;P = 0.002)方面存在差异。多因素分析显示,中度MR是影响长期生存的独立危险因素(P = 0.04)。I组1年、5年和10年的精算生存率分别为93.8%、73.3%和40.1%,而II组分别为92.3%、58.2%和14.6%(P = 0.04)。II组(n = 37)术后可用的超声心动图显示,81.8%的功能性MR患者的MR有所改善。然而,65.4%的原发性二尖瓣疾病(黏液瘤样、钙化或缺血性MR)患者的MR持续存在或恶化。功能结局显示,I组77%的患者与II组78.6%的患者在AVR术后将自身健康状况评为良好至优秀。
中度MR是影响接受AVR的老年患者长期生存的独立危险因素。因此,对于原发性二尖瓣疾病患者,应考虑同时进行二尖瓣手术。