| Literature DB >> 21731886 |
Abstract
Although porcine aortic valves or pericardial tissue mounted on a stent have made implantation techniques easier, these valves sacrifice orifice area and increase stress at the attachment of the stent, which causes primary tissue failure. Optimizing hemodynamics to prevent patient-prosthetic mismatch and improve durability, stentless bioprostheses use was revived in the early 1990s. The purpose of this review is to provide a current overview of stentless valves in the aortic position. Retrospective and prospective randomized controlled studies showed similar operative mortality and morbidity in stented and stentless aortic valve replacement (AVR), though stentless AVR required longer cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass time. Several cohort studies showed improved survival after stentless AVR, probably due to better hemodynamic performance and earlier left ventricular (LV) mass regression compared with stented AVR. However, there was a bias of operation age and nonrandomization. A randomized trial supported an improved 8-year survival of patients with the Freestyle or Toronto valves compared with Carpentier-Edwards porcine valves. On the contrary, another randomized study did not show improved clinical outcomes up to 12 years. Freedom from reoperation at 12 years in Toronto stentless porcine valves ranged from 69% to 75%, which is much lower than for Carpentier-Edwards Perimount valves. Cusp tear with consequent aortic regurgitation was the most common cause of structural valve deterioration. Cryolife O'Brien valves also have shorter durability compared with stent valves. Actuarial freedom from reoperation was 44% at 10 years. Early prosthetic valve failure was also reported in patients who underwent root replacement with Shelhigh stentless composite grafts. There was no level I or IIa evidence of more effective orifice area, mean pressure gradient, LV mass regression, surgical risk, durability, and late outcomes in stentless bioprostheses. There is no general recommendation to prefer stentless bioprostheses in all patients. For new-generation pericardial stentless valves, follow-up over 15 years is necessary to compare the excellent results of stented valves such as the Carpentier-Edwards Perimount and Hancock II valves.Entities:
Keywords: cardiopulmonary bypass; follow-up studies; heart disease; surgery; valves
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21731886 PMCID: PMC3119592 DOI: 10.2147/VHRM.S11253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Comparison of stented and stentless valves
| Operative mortality | Similar |
| Early outcomes | Similar (cohort and RCT study) |
| Late outcomes | Stentless group better (Cohort study) |
| Similar or slightly better in stentless group (RCT study) | |
| Hemodynamics | |
| Mean PG and EOA | Stentless better than porcine valve |
| Similar to pericardial valve | |
| Stented C–E Magna valve better than stentless Freestyle valve | |
| LV mass regression | |
| <6 months | Better in stentless group (most cohort and RCT study) |
| >12 months | Similar (cohort and RCT study) |
| Durability and SVD | Better in stented group |
Note:
Compared with the first-generation stentless valves.
Abbreviations: C–E, Carpentier–Edwards; EOA, effective orifice area; LV, left ventricular; PG, pressure gradient; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SVD, structural valve deterioration.
Characteristics of various stentless valves
| O’Brien valve | CryoLife | Porcine valve with GAH low-pressure fixation | Actuarial freedom from SVD 91% at 5 years and 44% at 10 years |
| Toronto SPV valve | St Jude Medical | Porcine valve with GAH low-pressure fixation | Freedom from reoperation 75% ± 5% at 12 years |
| Freestyle valve | Medtronic | Porcine aortic root with GAH zero-pressure fixation with amino oleic acid treatment | Actuarial freedom from SVD 97.0% ± 2.2% (subcoronary), 96.0% ± 4.5% (full root), and 90.9% ± 11.2% (root inclusion) at 10 years, |
| Prima Plus valve | Edwards Lifesciences | Porcine aortic root with GAH low-pressure fixation and XenoLogiX anticalcification treatment | Actuarial survival rate 71.5% at 8 years and freedom from SVD 97.8% at 8 years |
| Biocor stentless valve | St Jude Medical | Porcine valve sutured to a GAH-treated bovine pericardial conduit | Freedom from reoperation 98.9% ± 0.7% at 9 years |
| Pericarbon freedom valve | Sorin Biomedica | Bovine pericarial valve composed of two sheets sutured together, GAH treated, and detoxificated with homocysteic acid | Freedom from valve-related death and reoperation 91% ± 4% and 94% ± 4% at 7 years |
| Super-stentless valve | Shelhigh | Porcine valve mounted on a superflexible ring with GAH and No-React anticalcification treatment | Possible contamination and malfuction warning by the US Food and Drug Administration |
| 3F Therapeutics stentless valve | ATS Medical | Equine pericardial tubular valve treated with bufferd formulation of GAH fixation | Large effective orifice area (1.7 cm2) |
Abbreviations: GAH, glutaraldehyde; SVD, structural valve deterioration.