| Literature DB >> 34300329 |
Ilaria Giambuzzi1,2, Giorgia Bonalumi1, Michele Di Mauro3, Maurizio Roberto1, Silvia Corona1,2, Francesco Alamanni1,2, Marco Zanobini1.
Abstract
The Commando procedure is challenging, and aims to replace the mitral valve, the aortic valve and the aortic mitral curtain, when the latter is severely affected by pathological processes (such as infective endocarditis or massive calcification). Given the high complexity, it is seldomly performed. We aim to review the literature on early (hospitalization and up to 30 days) and long-term (at least 3 years of follow-up) results. Bibliographical research was performed on PubMed and Cochrane with a dedicated string. Papers regarding double valve replacement or repair in the context of aortic mitral curtain disease were included. The metaprop function was used to assess early survival and complications (pacemaker implantation, stroke and bleeding). Nine papers (540 patients, median follow-up 41 (IQR 24.5-51.5) months) were included in the study. Pooled proportion of early mortality, stroke, pacemaker implant and REDO for bleeding were, respectively 16.2%, 7.8%, 25.1% and 13.1%. The long-term survival rate ranged from 50% to 92.2%. Freedom from re-intervention was as high as 90.9% when the endocarditis was not the first etiology and 78.6% in case of valvular infection (one author had 100%). Freedom from IE recurrences reached 85% at 10 years. Despite the high mortality, the rates of re-intervention and infective endocarditis recurrences following the Commando procedure are satisfactory and confirm the need for an aggressive strategy to improve long-term outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Commando procedure; UFO procedure; aortic mitral curtain; endocarditis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34300329 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10143163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241