Modi Paul, Hassan Ansar, Chitwood Walter Randolph
East Carolina Heart Institute, Greenville, NC 27834, USA.
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2008 Nov;34(5):943-52. doi: 10.1016/j.ejcts.2008.07.057. Epub 2008 Sep 30.
The mitral valve has been traditionally approached through a median sternotomy. However, significant advances in surgical optics, instrumentation, tissue telemanipulation, and perfusion technology have allowed for mitral valve surgery to be performed using progressively smaller incisions including the minithoracotomy and hemisternotomy. Due to reports of excellent results, minimally invasive mitral valve surgery has become a standard of care at certain specialized centers worldwide. This meta-analysis quantifies the effects of minimally invasive mitral valve surgery on morbidity and mortality compared with conventional mitral surgery and demonstrates equivalent perioperative mortality (1641 patients, odds ratio (OR) 0.46, 95% confidence interval 0.15-1.42, p=0.18), reduced need for reoperation for bleeding (1553 patients, OR 0.56, 95% CI 0.35-0.90, p=0.02) and a trend towards shorter hospital stays (350 patients, weighted mean difference (WMD) -0.73, 95% CI -1.52 to 0.05, p=0.07). These benefits were evident despite longer cardiopulmonary bypass (WMD 25.81, 95% CI 13.13-38.50, p<0.0001) and cross-clamp times (WMD 20.91, 95% CI 8.79-33.04, p=0.0007) in the minimally invasive group. Case-control studies show consistently less pain and faster recovery compared to those having a conventional approach. Data for minimally invasive mitral valve surgery after previous cardiac surgery are limited but consistently demonstrate reduced blood loss, fewer transfusions and faster recovery compared to reoperative sternotomy. Long-term follow-up data from multiple cohort studies are also examined revealing equivalent survival and freedom from reoperation. Thus, current clinical data suggest that minimally invasive mitral valve surgery is a safe and a durable alternative to a conventional approach and is associated with less morbidity.
传统上,二尖瓣手术是通过正中胸骨切开术进行的。然而,手术光学、器械、组织远程操作和灌注技术的重大进展使得二尖瓣手术能够使用越来越小的切口进行,包括微创开胸术和半胸骨切开术。由于有报告称效果极佳,微创二尖瓣手术已成为全球某些专业中心的标准治疗方法。这项荟萃分析量化了微创二尖瓣手术与传统二尖瓣手术相比对发病率和死亡率的影响,结果显示围手术期死亡率相当(1641例患者,比值比(OR)为0.46,95%置信区间为0.15 - 1.42,p = 0.18),因出血而再次手术的需求减少(1553例患者,OR为0.56,95%置信区间为0.35 - 0.90,p = 0.02),且住院时间有缩短趋势(350例患者,加权平均差(WMD)为 -0.73,95%置信区间为 -1.52至0.05,p = 0.07)。尽管微创组的体外循环时间更长(WMD为25.81,95%置信区间为13.13 - 38.50,p < 0.0001)和主动脉阻断时间更长(WMD为20.91,95%置信区间为8.79 - 33.04,p = 0.0007),这些益处仍然明显。病例对照研究表明,与采用传统方法的患者相比,疼痛持续时间始终更短,恢复更快。既往心脏手术后进行微创二尖瓣手术的数据有限,但与再次胸骨切开术相比,始终显示出血量减少、输血次数减少且恢复更快。多项队列研究的长期随访数据也表明,生存率和再次手术的自由度相当。因此,目前的临床数据表明,微创二尖瓣手术是传统手术方法的一种安全且持久的替代方法,并且发病率更低。