| Literature DB >> 24313648 |
Marcus-Andre Deutsch, Sabine Bleiziffer, Yacine Elhmidi, Nicolo Piazza, Bernhard Voss, Ruediger Lange, Markus Krane1.
Abstract
Aortic valve stenosis (AVS) is the most frequent acquired valvular heart disease in western industrialized countries and its prevalence considerably increases with age. Once becoming symptomatic severe AVS has a very poor prognosis. Progressive and rapid symptom deterioration leads to an impairment of functional status and compromised healthrelated quality-of-life (HrQoL) simultaneously. Until recently, surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) has been the only effective treatment option for improving symptoms and prolonging survival. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) emerged as an alternative treatment modality for those patients with severe symptomatic AVS in whom the risk for SAVR is considered prohibitive or too high. TAVR has gained clinical acceptance with almost startling rapidity and has even quickly become the standard of care for the treatment of appropriately selected individuals with inoperable AVS during recent years. Typically, patients currently referred for and treated by TAVR are elderly with a concomitant variable spectrum of multiple comorbidities, disabilities and limited life expectancy. Beyond mortality and morbidity, the assessment of HrQoL is of paramount importance not only to guide patient-centered clinical decision-making but also to judge this new treatment modality. As per current evidence, TAVR significantly improves HrQoL in high-surgical risk patients with severe AVS with sustained effects up to two years when compared with optimal medical care and demonstrates comparable benefits relative to SAVR. Along with a provision of a detailed overview of the current literature regarding functional and HrQoL outcomes in patients undergoing TAVR, this review article addresses specific considerations of the HrQoL aspect in the elderly patient and finally outlines the implications of HrQoL outcomes for medico-economic deliberations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24313648 PMCID: PMC3941091 DOI: 10.2174/1573403x09666131202121750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rev ISSN: 1573-403X
Design and HrQoL outcomes reported in TAVR-related studies.
| Study/Year/ Reference | Number of pts. [n] | Mean age [years ± SD] | Mean logEuroScore [% ± SD] | Follow-up [months ± SD] | HrQoL Instrument | Control Group | Valve/Access Site | Main Findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ussia | 57/30 | 81.7 ± 4.7 | 25.3 ± 8.1 | 5 | SF-12 | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF | Mean NYHA: 2.7±0.6 to 1.8±0.5 (p<0.001); Improved (p<0.001) PCS and MCS, return to population norms, greatest change in PF | |
| Gotzmann | 44 | 79.1 ± 7 | 18.3 ± 12.4 | 1 | MLHFQ | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF, SC | NYHA III/IV: 90% vs. 16% (p<0.001); 25%increase in 6-minute walk time (p<0.005); significant improvement of MLHFQ overall score 44± 19.1 vs. 28±17.5 (p <0.001); NTpro:BNP: 725 ± 837 pg/ml vs. 423±320 pg/ml (p<0.005) | |
| Krane | 99/86 | 81 ± 6 | 20 | 3 | SF-36 | no | Edwards SAPIEN/TA Medtronic CoreValve/TF | Mean NYHA: 3.1±0.25 vs. 1.7±0.62 (p<0.001); More class I/II at 3 months (NYHA functional class III/IV from 98%to 2% at 3 months) Improved physical health and vitality at 3 months (all p<0.01). No change mental health. | |
| Bekeredjian | 87/80 | 86 ± 2.9 | 24 ± 15.1 | 6 | SF-36 | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF | Mean NYHA: 3.1±0.5 vs. 1.9±0.6 (p<0.0001); Significant improvements in all 8 health components, PCS and MCS, greatest change in PF (190% increase); NTpro-BNP: 5,8 ± 8,0 ng/L vs. 1,6 ± 3,7 ng/L p < 0.0001). | |
| LefÈvre | 130/107 | 82.1 ± 5.5 | 30.0 ± 13.7 | 1/6/12 | KCCQ, EQ-5D | no | Edwards SAPIEN/TF, TA | NYHA III/IV: 84.6% vs. 10.4%,. Of the TF patients, KCCQ score improved in 72.7% and EQ-5D in 51.6%. Among TA patients, KCCQ score improved in 73.9% and EQ-5D in 60.0%. | |
| GonÇalves | 74/53 | 81.6 ± 8 | 19.3 ± 9.9 | 6.5 | MLHFQ | no | Edwards SAPIEN/TA Medtronic CoreValve/TF | Mean NYHA: 2.9±0.4 to 1.4±0.7 (p<0.001); Significant improvement in MLHFQ scores [overall (37.0±14.7 vs. 14.4±10.1; p<0.001)] | |
| Gotzmann | 51 | 78 ± 6.6 | 19.6 ± 11.3 | 1/12 | MLHFQ | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF | NYHA III/IV: 94%, 18%, to 26% (p<0.001); 6MW-Test: 185 ± 106 vs. 248 ± 119 vs. 266 ± 118 (p<0.001); significantly improved MLHFQ score 39.6 ± 19 vs. 26.1 ± 18, p <0.001); NTpro-BNP: 642 ± 634 vs. 323 ± 266 pg/ml (p <0.001) | |
| Georgiadou | 36 | 80.5 ± 5.9 | 29.7 ± 13.7 | 11.3 ± 4.9 | SF-36, SF-12 | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF, SC | Mean NYHA: 3 ± 0.7 vs 1.2 ± 0.4, (p<0 .001). significant improvement in all domains and summary scale scores, higher than general population norms | |
| Ussia | 143/138 | 81.0±4.6 | 23.4 ± 14.7 | 5/12 | SF-12 | no | Edwards SAPIEN/TF Medtronic CoreValve/TF | NYHA III/IV: 64.3% to 4.2% (p<0.001); marked mid-term improvement in functional status and physical and mental health; PCS 28.3 vs. 44.0 at five vs. 42.4 (p<0.001). MCS 38.0 vs. 47.3 vs. 48.2 (p<0.001). | |
| Reynolds | 179 | 83 ± 9 | 11.2± 5.8 (STS-Score) | 1/6/12 | KCCQ, SF-12 | Medical n=179 | Edwards SAPIEN/TF,TA | Improved 6-MW-Test pre/post at 1 year; no change in no-TAVR group KCCQ; Marked improvement with TAVR at 1 year; improvement in physical and mental HRQOL with TAVR; fewer rehospitalizations at 1 year | |
| Fairbairne | 102 | 80 ± 0.6 | 20 ± 13 | 1/6/12 | SF-12 EQ-5D, SF-6D | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF, SC | HRQOL significantly improved over 1 year (SF-12 PCS p = 0.02; EQ-5D p = 0.02; SF-6D p=0.03); similar to age-adjusted U.S. population norms; greatest change from baseline to 30 days (p < 0.001), with further significant improvements to 6 months (p < 0.01). | |
| Amonn | 144 | 79.7 ± 9.2 | 26.5 ± 16.1 | 15 ± 10 | SF-36 | SAVR n=93 | Edwards SAPIEN/TA | Similar health metascore in both groups (65.6 ± 19 vs. 68.8 ± 22, P = 0.29), while a significant difference was observed in the physical health metascore (49.7 ± 21 vs. 62.0 ± 21, P = 0.015). After adjustment for baseline characteristics, this difference disappeared. | |
| Krane | 186/106 | 81 ± 6.8 | 19.74 ± 12.1 | 3/12 | SF-36 | no | Edwards SAPIEN/TA Medtronic CoreValve/TF | Mean NYHA: 3.1 vs. 1.9 vs. 2.0 (p<0.001) significant increase in physical scores with a minor change in mental scores, both comparable with age-matched standard population; high degree of independence; 88.6% reaffirmation to undergo TAVR again standard population. | |
| Reynolds | 328 | 83.8 ± 6.8 | 11.8 ± 3.2 (STS-Score) | 1/6/12 | KCCQ, EQ-5D SF-12 | SAVR n=216 (TAVR-TF) n=84 (TAVR-TA) | Edwards SAPIEN/TF, TA | Substantial health status improvment between baseline and 1 year after either TAVR or SAVR. TAVR via the transfemoral, but not the transapical route, was associated with a short-term advantage compared with surgery. KCCQ difference TAVR vs. SAVR at 1 month 9.9 (p>0.001). | |
| Taramasso | 100 | 79.7± 6.1 | 27.9±15.9 | 12/24 | SF-36, MLHFQ | no | Edwards SAPIEN/TF, TA Medtronic CoreValve/TF SC, TAx | Significant improvement in functional status sustained up to two years, 20-point increase in the SF-36 PCS score, 34-point decrease in the MLHFQ | |
| Stortecky | 176/62 | 83±5 | 22 ± 13 | 9 | SF-36 | no | Medtronic CoreValve/TF Edwards SAPIEN/TF | Mean NYHA: 2.6±0.8 to 1.4±0.6 (p<0.0001). improvments in all components of physical and mental health | |