| Literature DB >> 26180639 |
John Chambers1, Simon Ray2, Bernard Prendergast2, Tim Graham3, Brian Campbell4, Donna Greenhalgh5, Mario Petrou6, Jeremy Tinkler7, Christa Gohlke-Bärwolf8, Carlos A Mestres9, Raphael Rosenhek10, Philippe Pibarot11, Catherine Otto12, Thoralf Sundt13.
Abstract
Surgical centres of excellence should include multidisciplinary teams with specialist expertise in imaging, clinical assessment and surgery for patients with heart valve disease. There should be structured training programmes for the staff involved in the periprocedural care of the patient and these should be overseen by national or international professional societies. Good results are usually associated with high individual and centre volumes, but this relationship is complex. Results of surgery should be published by centre and should include rates of residual regurgitation for mitral repairs and reoperation rates matched to the preoperative pathology and risk.Entities:
Keywords: QUALITY OF CARE AND OUTCOMES; VALVULAR DISEASE
Year: 2015 PMID: 26180639 PMCID: PMC4499687 DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2014-000216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Heart ISSN: 2053-3624
Example targets for surgical outcomes in repair of mitral valve prolapse
| Rate | |
|---|---|
| Mortality | <1% |
| Major complication rate | <2% |
| Repair rate for P2 prolapse | ≥90% |
| Significant residual mitral regurgitation | ≤5% at 5 years |
| Reoperation rate | |
| Posterior repair | ≤1–4% p.a. |
| Anterior repair | ≤2–5% p.a. |
p.a., per annum.