| Literature DB >> 28751850 |
Giovanni Pulignano1, Michele Massimo Gulizia2, Samuele Baldasseroni3, Francesco Bedogni4, Giovanni Cioffi5, Ciro Indolfi6, Francesco Romeo7, Adriano Murrone8, Francesco Musumeci9, Alessandro Parolari10, Leonardo Patanè11, Paolo Giuseppe Pino12, Annalisa Mongiardo6, Carmen Spaccarotella6, Roberto Di Bartolomeo13, Giuseppe Musumeci14.
Abstract
Aortic stenosis is one of the most frequent valvular diseases in developed countries, and its impact on public health resources and assistance is increasing. A substantial proportion of elderly people with severe aortic stenosis is not eligible to surgery because of the advanced age, frailty, and multiple co-morbidities. Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) enables the treatment of very elderly patients at high or prohibitive surgical risk considered ineligible for surgery and with an acceptable life expectancy. However, a significant percentage of patients die or show no improvement in quality of life (QOL) in the follow-up. In the decision-making process, it is important to determine: (i) whether and how much frailty of the patient influences the risk of procedures; (ii) how the QOL and the individual patient's survival are influenced by aortic valve disease or from other associated conditions; and (iii) whether a geriatric specialist intervention to evaluate and correct frailty or other diseases with their potential or already manifest disabilities can improve the outcome of surgery or TAVI. Consequently, in addition to risk stratification with conventional tools, a number of factors including multi-morbidity, disability, frailty, and cognitive function should be considered, in order to assess the expected benefit of both surgery and TAVI. The pre-operative optimization through a multidisciplinary approach with a Heart Team can counteract the multiple damage (cardiac, neurological, muscular, respiratory, and kidney) that can potentially aggravate the reduced physiological reserves characteristic of frailty. The systematic application in clinical practice of multidimensional assessment instruments of frailty and cognitive function in the screening and the adoption of specific care pathways should facilitate this task.Entities:
Keywords: Aortic stenosis; Elderly; Frailty; Geriatric assessment; Prognosis; Risk score; SAVR; TAVI
Year: 2017 PMID: 28751850 PMCID: PMC5520760 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/sux012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J Suppl ISSN: 1520-765X Impact factor: 1.803
Risk assessment combining STS risk estimate, frailty, major organ system dysfunction, and procedure-specific impediments
| Low risk (must meet all criteria in this column) | Intermediate risk (any 1 criterion in this column) | High risk (any 1 criterion in this column) | Prohibitive risk (any 1 criterion in this column) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| STS PROM | <4% AND | 4–8% OR | >8% OR | Predicted risk with surgery of death or major morbidity (all-cause) >50% at 1 year OR |
| Frailty | None AND | 1 Indice (lieve) OR | ≥2 Indices (moderate-severe) OR | |
| Major organ system compromise not to be improved postoperatively | None AND | 1 Organ system OR | No more than 2 organ system OR | ≥3 Organ system OR |
| Procedurespecific impediment | None | Possible | Possible | Severe |
aUse of the STS PROM to predict risk in a given institution with reasonable reliability is appropriate only if institutional outcomes are within 1 standard deviation of STS average observed/expected ratio for the procedure in question.
bSeven frailty indices: Katz activities of daily living (independence in feeding, bathing, dressing, transferring, toileting, and urinary continence) and independence in ambulation (no walking aid or assist required or 5 m walk in < 6 s). Other scoring systems can be applied to calculate no, mild-, or moderate-to-severe frailty.
cExamples of major organ system compromise: Cardiac—severe LV systolic or diastolic dysfunction or RV dysfunction, fixed pulmonary hypertension; CKD Stage 3 or worse; pulmonary dysfunction with FEV1 <50% or DLCO2 <50% of predicted; CNS dysfunction (dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, CVA with persistent physical limitation); GI dysfunction—Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, nutritional impairment, or serum albumin <3.0; cancer—active malignancy; and liver—any history of cirrhosis, variceal bleeding, or elevated INR in the absence of VKA therapy.
dExamples include tracheostomy present, heavily calcified ascending aorta, chest malformation, arterial coronary graft adherent to posterior chest wall, and radiation damage.
CKD, chronic kidney disease; CNS, central nervous system; CVA, stroke; DLCO2, diffusion capacity for carbon dioxide; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; GI, gastrointestinal; INR, international normalized ratio; LV, left ventricular; PROM, predicted risk of mortality; RV, right ventricular; STS, Society of Thoracic Surgeons; and VKA, vitamin K antagonist.
Comparison of EuroSCORE, EuroSCORE II, and STS score (modified from Nashef et al. and O’Brien et al.)
| EuroSCORE | EuroSCORE II | STS score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome | In-hospital mortality | 30-day Mortality | Mortalitày and post-operative complications |
| Surgery | Mainly CABG | Not specific | Specific for surgery |
| High risk threshold | >20% | >7% | >10% |
| Discrimination: ability to differentiate between low and high-risk patients (assessed using the ‘under the ROC curve area’ or the c-index) | AUC for valvular surgery = 0.72; | AUC = 0.81 | AUC |
| Acceptable | Acceptable | For lone valvular surgery = 0.80 | |
| For valvular surgery + CABG = 0.75 Acceptable | |||
| Calibration: report predicted/observed mortality | Greatly overestimated mortality in all categories of risk, especially in the high-risk group: suboptimal. Documented calibration loss in time because of the update to EuroSCORE II I | Low-risk group calibration: good | Low-risk group calibration: good |
| Overestimated mortality in high-risk group: suboptimal | Underestimated mortality in high-risk group: suboptimal | ||
| Discrimination in TAVI | Not acceptable | Not acceptable | Not acceptable |
| Calibration in TAVI | Not acceptable | Not acceptable | Not acceptable |
TAVI, transcatheter aortic valve implantation.
Pre-procedure screening recommendations. Modified from ref.
| Laboratory indices | Full blood count, serum urea, creatinine and electrolytes, C-reactive protein, serum transaminases, serum albumin, coagulation profile, blood culture, sputum culture, mid-stream urine, glycosylated haemoglobin, human immunodeficiency virus, and hepatitis serology |
| Physical indices | Height, weight, and body mass index |
| Clinical data to calculate logistic EuroSCORE or STS score | Detailed clinical history, examination and current medication list, 12-lead electrocardiography, echocardiography (transthoracic/transoesophageal), coronary angiography, peripheral vascular screening (contrast angiography/multidetector computed tomography), pulmonary function testing, and right heart catheterization |
| Clinical parameters of co-morbid conditions | Pulmonary function tests, carotid, and vertebral and abdominal ultrasonography |
| Frailty and cognitive function | Grip strength, graded exercise testing, walk test, physical activity level, and mini-mental score |
| Confirmation of aortic stenosis severity and assessment of associated pathology | Echocardiography (transthoracic/transesophageal), exercise stress testing, and stress echocardiography |
| Procedural planning | Multidetector computed tomography/transoesophageal echocardiography Aortic annulus: dimensions (minimal, maximal, and mean diameter; area; perimeter) and severity/distribution of calcification Other: Height of coronary arteries, sinus of valsalva dimensions, ascending aorta dimensions Iliofemoral vessels: minimal luminal diameter, tortuosity, calcium distribution Aorta: aortic plaque distribution, descending aortic tortuosity, proximal ascending aortic diameter |
STS, Society of Thoracic Surgeons.
aFried frailty index.