Literature DB >> 34810276

Quality of life after transcatheter or surgical aortic valve replacement using the Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire.

Simon Kennon1, Rima Styra2, Nikolaos Bonaros3, Lukas Stastny3, Mauro Romano4, Thierry Lefèvre5, Carlo Di Mario6, Pierluigi Stefàno6, Flavio Luciano Ribichini7, Dominique Himbert8, Marina Urena-Alcazar8, Jorge Salgado-Fernandez9, Jose Joaquin Cuenca Castillo9, Bruno Garcia10, Cornelia Deutsch11, Lenka Sykorova12, Jana Kurucova12, Martin Thoenes13, Claudia Lüske11, Peter Bramlage11, Derk Frank14.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire (TASQ) is a validated instrument for assessing quality of life (QoL) in patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS). In this study, we evaluated health status outcomes, based on the TASQ, in patients with severe AS undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) or surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR).
METHODS: The TASQ registry was a prospective observational registry. Patients with severe AS from nine centres in Europe and one in Canada underwent either SAVR or transfemoral TAVR. Patients completed the TASQ, Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire and Short Form-12 V.2 prior to the intervention, predischarge, and at 30-day and 3-month follow-ups. Primary end point was the TASQ score.
RESULTS: In both the TAVR (n=137) and SAVR (n=137) cohorts, significant increases were observed in all three scores. The overall TASQ score improved as did all but one of the individual domains at 3 months after the intervention (p<0.001). TASQ health expectations were the only domain which worsened (p<0.001). Across TASQ subscores, significant changes were evident from the time of discharge in the TAVR and 30-day follow-up in the SAVR cohort. In a categorical analysis of the TASQ, 39.7% of the TAVR group and 35.0% of the SAVR group had a substantially improved health status at 3 months compared with baseline.
CONCLUSIONS: The TASQ captured changes in QoL among patients with severe AS who were treated with TAVR or SAVR. QoL improved substantially after either intervention, as indicated by changes in the TASQ overall score at 3 months. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03186339. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aortic diseases; aortic valve stenosis; healthcare; heart valve prosthesis implantation; outcome assessment; quality of healthcare

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34810276      PMCID: PMC8609945          DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2021-001821

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Open Heart        ISSN: 2053-3624


The Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire (TASQ) is a validated instrument for assessing quality of life (QoL) in patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS). We evaluated health status outcomes, based on the TASQ, in patients with severe AS undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) or surgical aortic valve replacement. QoL improved substantially after either intervention, as indicated by changes in the TASQ overall score at 3 months. With the TASQ, a validated tool for QoL assessments of patients undergoing surgical or TAVR is available.

Introduction

Patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS) are often elderly with multiple comorbidities.1 The symptom burden from severe AS can disrupt their ability to participate in daily activities and adversely affect their quality of life (QoL).2 The primary aim of treating AS is to prolong survival while considering the effect of interventions on QoL when assessing the risks and benefits of treatment.3 Aortic valve (AV) replacement using either surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) or transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) improves survival in patients with severe symptomatic AS,4 and evidence suggests these procedures also improve QoL.5–9 The Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire (TASQ) is a validated QoL instrument for patients undergoing TAVR or SAVR.10 11 This questionnaire reflects AS-specific symptoms and how they affect a patient’s physical and mental well-being, as well as evaluates patients’ assessment of their general health. It is short, convenient to use and specific to patients with AS, providing an accurate picture of QoL in patients with severe AS, before and after treatment.11 We performed a multinational prospective study to evaluate health status outcomes, based on the TASQ, in patients with severe symptomatic AS treated with either TAVR or SAVR. The study’s principal results have been reported previously.11 TAVR and SAVR may be used in different patient populations and can be associated with different procedure-related complications, which may result in differences in health status. Therefore, separate analyses of patients who had TAVR and SAVR may provide additional relevant information on QoL outcomes in patients with AS undergoing different interventions. TASQ-based health status outcomes for study patients with severe AS are now reported separately for patients who underwent TAVR and SAVR.

Methods

The TASQ registry was a prospective observational registry with a follow-up period of 3 months.10 12 Patients with severe symptomatic AS were recruited from nine European centres (Austria/Germany,2 France,2 Italy,2 Spain2 and the UK1) and one centre in Canada, with the intention of having at least two sites per language. Patients underwent either transfemoral (TF) TAVR using the balloon expandable SAPIEN three valve (Edwards Lifesciences), or SAVR using any commercially available surgical valve. Treatment decisions were made by the local heart team, based on standard in-house protocols, and were independent of the study. Recruitment was intentionally not limited to comparable cases as this would have excluded surgery in young patients with low surgical risk and TAVR in older patients with high or prohibitive surgical risk. Patients were excluded from the study if they were unable to complete the questionnaire due to cognitive impairment. The principal objective of the registry was to validate the TASQ questionnaire in patients with severe symptomatic AS undergoing TAVR or SAVR.

TASQ, Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) and Short Form-12 V.2 (SF-12v2) questionnaires

For this registry, the TASQ was produced in English (available open access10 12) and validated translations were produced in French, German, Italian and Spanish. Patients were required to complete the TASQ prior to the intervention (baseline), pre-discharge, and at 30-day and 3 months follow-up. The scoring of the TASQ10 is based on a consistent 7-point scale for each of the 16 questions, covering response options from “not very much” to “very much”. The TASQ consists of five domains: physical symptoms (questions 1 and 14), physical limitations (questions 3, 6, 7 and 15), emotional impact (questions 2 and 8–13), social limitations (questions 4 and 5) and health expectations (question 16). Each question has a maximum score of 7, giving the complete questionnaire a maximum total score of 112, with a higher score indicating improved QoL. The full questionnaire is available online (wwwtasq-qcom. Patients also completed the KCCQ. The KCCQ13 is a 23-item self-administered questionnaire that addresses specific health domains, including physical limitation, symptom frequency and burden, QoL, social limitation, symptom stability and self-efficacy—the first four are combined into an overall summary scale. Values for the domains range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating lower symptom burden and better QoL. The self-efficacy domain is designed to assess whether or not patients feel they have the knowledge and skills to manage their heart failure as an outpatient. The KCCQ has been used in several AS-related analyses.7 8 14 Generic health status was assessed with the SF-12v2. The Short Form-12 (SF-12) is a reliable and valid measure of generic health status that provides overall physical and mental component summary scores.15 Scores are standardised using norm-based methods around a mean of 50, with higher scores indicating better health status.16 The maximum score for both physical and mental component summary scores is 100.

Statistical analysis

The primary endpoint was the TASQ score. The primary analysis evaluated patients’ health status in the TAVR and SAVR cohorts separately. Missing health status (TASQ) values were replaced by the mean score, provided that the patient had responded to ≥50% of the questions for that subscale. Mean changes in health status scores at all time points were compared with baseline within each treatment group using paired t-tests. Categorical analyses incorporating both health status (TASQ) and survival were performed to provide further perspective on the effect of these interventions over time. For these analyses, ordinal categories were defined as death, worse (decrease of >5% vs baseline), no change (change of between –5% and 5%), slightly improved (increase of >5%–10% vs baseline), moderately improved (increase of 10%–20%) and substantially improved (increase of >20%). Baseline characteristics were compared between the cohorts using two-tailed t-tests for continuous variables and χ2 test or Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables (p values <0.05 were regarded as statistically significant). The comparison provided proof for the assumption that the two patient populations were quite different. While we provide statistical measures for a comparison of patients who underwent TAVR and SAVR, we dismissed any further attempt to adjust or match the two groups. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS V.24.0.

Results

Overall, 274 patients were included in the analysis, of which 137 underwent TAVR and SAVR, respectively (table 1).
Table 1

Patient characteristics

TAVR (n=137)SAVR (n=137)P value
Age (years)82.7±6.472.5±7.6<0.001
Female gender59 (43.1)43 (31.4)0.046
Body mass index (kg/m2)27.7±5.028.4±4.90.209
Cardiac disease
Coronary artery disease65 (47.4)14 (10.2)<0.001
 Previous myocardial infarction11 (8.7)2 (1.5)0.007
 Percutaneous coronary intervention31 (22.6)11 (8.0)0.001
 Coronary artery bypass graft15 (10.9)0 (0)<0.001
History of atrial fibrillation48 (36.4)20 (14.9)<0.001
Pacemaker/ICD implantation15 (10.9)6 (4.4)0.041
Previous hospital admission due to CHF48 (37.2)13 (9.8)<0.001
Aortic and/or peripheral vascular surgery1 (0.8)3 (2.2)0.623
Mitral valve intervention2 (1.6)1 (0.7)0.613
Tricuspid valve intervention2 (1.6)1 (0.7)0.613
Comorbidities
Carotid artery stenosis (>50%)12 (8.8)4 (3.0)0.030
Cerebrovascular disease17 (12.6)4 (2.9)0.003
Peripheral vascular disease15 (11.3)4 (3.0)0.008
Diabetes mellitus36 (26.3)31 (22.6)0.482
Pulmonary disease23 (17.0)19 (13.9)0.470
Pulmonary hypertension (sys >60 mm Hg)8 (7.0)5 (4.3)0.383
Renal insufficiency/failure
 Creatinine ≥2.0 mg/dL8 (5.8)1 (0.7)0.036
 Dialysis1 (0.7)0 (0)1.000
Current smoker2 (1.5)6 (4.4)0.282
Present diagnosis of a psychiatric diagnosis, anxiety disorder or depression (being actively treated)4 (2.9)6 (4.4)0.519
Risk scores, mean±SD
Euroscore II4.18±3.581.68±1.75<0.001
STS risk score5.22±4.742.45±2.69<0.001
MMSE-225.2±5.327.1±3.10.001
Katz5.65±0.975.96±0.27<0.001
IADL6.39±1.927.36±1.20<0.001
 Female5.88±2.107.58±0.91<0.001
 Male6.77±1.677.27±1.310.030
Baseline health status, mean±SD
TASQ overall summary67.1±19.475.3±17.7<0.001
TASQ physical symptoms8.1±2.58.9±2.80.015
TASQ physical limitations13.5±5.716.1±5.8<0.001
TASQ emotional impact30.8±10.333.1±9.80.061
TASQ social limitations9.1±4.211.3±3.3<0.001
TASQ health expectations5.6±1.45.9±1.40.122
KCCQ overall summary52.4±22.468.1±19.6<0.001
KCCQ physical limitations55.1±26.275.1±20.7<0.001
KCCQ total symptoms61.5±23.871.9±21.8<0.001
KCCQ quality of life44.9±23.355.2±22.7<0.001
KCCQ social limitation48.5±28.970.2±26.5<0.001
SF-12v2 physical summary36.9±7.242.4±9.3<0.001
SF-12v2 mental summary47.0±10.950.0±9.90.018

MMSE-2 score: 0–30 (the higher, the better); Katz activities of daily living score: 0 (dependent)–6 (independent); IADL score: 0 (low function, dependent)–8 (high function, independent).

CHF, congestive heart failure; IADL, instrumental activities of daily living; ICD, implantable cardioverter–defibrillator; KCCQ, Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire; MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination; SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; SF-12v2, Short Form-12 V.2; STS, Society of Thoracic Surgeons; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

Patient characteristics MMSE-2 score: 0–30 (the higher, the better); Katz activities of daily living score: 0 (dependent)–6 (independent); IADL score: 0 (low function, dependent)–8 (high function, independent). CHF, congestive heart failure; IADL, instrumental activities of daily living; ICD, implantable cardioverter–defibrillator; KCCQ, Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire; MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination; SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; SF-12v2, Short Form-12 V.2; STS, Society of Thoracic Surgeons; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

TASQ in patients undergoing TAVR

The mean age of patients in the TAVR cohort was 82.7 years, and 43.1% were female. Coronary artery disease (CAD, 47.4%), previous hospital admission for congestive heart failure (CHF, 37.2%) and a history of atrial fibrillation (AF, 36.4%) were common in this group. The mean Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) risk score among patients undergoing TAVR was 5.22. At baseline, the mean TASQ score among patients undergoing TAVR was 67.1, while the mean KCCQ score was 52.4 and the mean SF-12v2 score was 36.9 (table 1). Among patients undergoing TAVR, considerable and statistically significant increases were observed in the overall TASQ score, and in all but one of the single-domain TASQ scores, at 3 months after the intervention (p<0.001) (table 2), health expectations worsened (p<0.001). Corresponding changes were observed with the KCCQ and SF-12v2 questionnaires at all time points (online supplemental figures 1 and 2).
Table 2

Within-group change in TASQ after TAVR or SAVR

TAVRSAVR
nPaired difference versus baseline (95% CI)P valuenPaired difference versus baseline (95% CI)P value
TASQ overall summary
 Discharge1308.2 (5.3 to 11.0)<0.001128−1.8 (−4.5 to 1.0)0.209
 30 days12416.9 (13.6 to 2.1)<0.0011189.1 (5.4 to 12.7)<0.001
 3 months11919.7 (16.4 to 23.0)<0.00112114.6 (10.8 to 18.3)<0.001
TASQ physical symptoms
 Discharge1301.8 (1.3 to 2.2)<0.0011290.3 (−0.1 to 0.7)0.132
 30 days1242.4 (1.9 to 2.9)<0.0011191.6 (1.1 to 2.1)<0.001
 3 months1192.8 (2.3 to 3.2)<0.0011222.1 (1.6 to 2.7)<0.001
TASQ physical limitations
 Discharge1283.2 (2.9 to 4.2)<0.0011270.1 (−1.0 to 1.1)0.917
 30 days1247.1 (6.1 to 8.2)<0.0011193.9 (2.8 to 5.1)<0.001
 3 months1198.1 (7.1 to 9.1)<0.0011216.1 (4.9 to 7.3)<0.001
TASQ emotional impact
 Discharge1302.8 (1.3 to 4.2)<0.001127−0.1 (−1.5 to 1.4)0.920
 30 days1225.9 (4.2 to 7.5)<0.0011193.8 (1.8 to 5.7)<0.001
 3 months1197.2 (5.4 to 9.0)<0.0011216.4 (4.5 to 8.3)<0.001
TASQ social limitations
 Discharge1270.6 (−0.02 to 1.2)0.058125−1.9 (−2.7 to −1.2)<0.001
 30 days1222.0 (1.4 to 2.7)<0.001119−0.2 (−1.0 to 0.5)0.516
 3 months1182.8 (2.1 to 3.4)<0.0011220.9 (0.2 to 1.5)0.013
TASQ health expectations
 Discharge127−0.2 (−0.5 to 0.1)0.242128−0.2 (−0.5 to 0.05)0.100
 30 days123−0.8 (−1.1 to −0.4)<0.001118−0.3 (−0.6 to 0.1)0.120
 3 months119−1.1 (−1.4 to −0.7)<0.001120−1.0 (−1.4 to −0.5)<0.001

All questions were used for the total score. Missing values were replaced by the mean score at that follow-up time point, provided that the patient had responded to at least 50% of the questions for that subscale; otherwise, patient questionnaires were excluded.

SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

Within-group change in TASQ after TAVR or SAVR All questions were used for the total score. Missing values were replaced by the mean score at that follow-up time point, provided that the patient had responded to at least 50% of the questions for that subscale; otherwise, patient questionnaires were excluded. SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement. Significant improvements in the overall TASQ score and in the physical symptoms, physical limitations and emotional impact TASQ domains were observed at hospital discharge (p<0.001) and remained significant thereafter (figure 1). Significant changes in the social limitations domain (improvement) and health expectations domain (worsening) were only seen from 30 days onwards (p<0.001). When the baseline score for the overall TASQ was set to 100%, the absolute increase in the overall TASQ score was approximately 12% at discharge, 26% at 30 days and 30% at 3 months (figure 2).
Figure 1

Absolute TASQ score at baseline and 3-month follow-up. Bars between columns represent the maximum achievable score per domain. SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

Figure 2

TAVR vs SAVR at baseline, discharge, 30 days and 3 months after the intervention, adjusted for differences in baseline TASQ score. SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement. *P<0.05, ***P<0.001 vs baseline.

Absolute TASQ score at baseline and 3-month follow-up. Bars between columns represent the maximum achievable score per domain. SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement. TAVR vs SAVR at baseline, discharge, 30 days and 3 months after the intervention, adjusted for differences in baseline TASQ score. SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement. *P<0.05, ***P<0.001 vs baseline. At 3 months, two patients (1.7%) in the TAVR group had died and 5.8% had a worse health status compared with the baseline situation. However, the proportion of patients categorised as ‘worsened’ declined continuously from discharge through the 30-day follow-up and up to 3 months (figure 3). At 3 months, 39.7% of the TAVR group had a ‘substantially improved’ health status compared with baseline.
Figure 3

Proportion of patients who underwent TAVR and SAVR achieving specific levels of clinically relevant change in health status (TASQ score and survival status). P values are derived from the Mann-Whitney U test for these categorical analyses, ordinal categories for clinically relevant changes in the TASQ (plus survival status) were defined as death, worse (decrease of >5% vs baseline), no change (change of between –5% and <5%), slightly improved (increase of 5% to <10% vs baseline), moderately improved (increase of 10% to <20%), substantially improved (increase of ≥20%). SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

Proportion of patients who underwent TAVR and SAVR achieving specific levels of clinically relevant change in health status (TASQ score and survival status). P values are derived from the Mann-Whitney U test for these categorical analyses, ordinal categories for clinically relevant changes in the TASQ (plus survival status) were defined as death, worse (decrease of >5% vs baseline), no change (change of between –5% and <5%), slightly improved (increase of 5% to <10% vs baseline), moderately improved (increase of 10% to <20%), substantially improved (increase of ≥20%). SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TASQ, Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life Questionnaire; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

TASQ in patients undergoing SAVR

The mean age of patients in the SAVR cohort was 72.5 years and 31.4% were female. The most common concurrent cardiac diseases were AF (14.9%) and CAD (10.2%). Mean STS risk score was 2.45. At baseline, the mean TASQ score was 75.3; the mean KCCQ score was 68.1; and the mean SF-12v2 score was 42.4 (table 1). Among patients who underwent SAVR, considerable and statistically significant increases were observed in the overall TASQ score, and in all but one of the single-domain TASQ scores, at 3 months after the intervention (p<0.001) (table 2). Again, the health expectations domain worsened at 3 months (p<0.001). Corresponding changes were observed with the KCCQ and SF-12v2 questionnaires at all time points (online supplemental figures 1 and 2). Significant improvements were not observed for any TASQ (and KCCQ and SF-12v2) scores at the time of discharge but were seen from 30 days onwards for the overall TASQ score, and the physical symptoms, physical limitations and emotional impact TASQ domains (p<0.001). The social limitations domain had worsened at discharge (p<0.001), but by 3 months, a significant improvement from baseline was seen (p=0.013). The health expectations domain did not differ significantly from baseline at discharge or 30 days. When the baseline score for the overall TASQ was set to 100%, the absolute change in the overall TASQ score was approximately –3% at discharge, +12% at 30 days and +20% at 3 months (figure 2). At 3 months, two patients (1.7%) in the SAVR group had died and 13.0% had a worse health status compared with the baseline. However, the proportion of patients categorised as worsened declined continuously from discharge through the 30-day follow-up and up to 3 months (figure 3). At 3 months, 35% of the SAVR group had a substantially improved health status compared with baseline.

TASQ–TAVR versus SAVR

Recruitment was intentionally not limited to comparable cases as this would have excluded surgery in young patients with low surgical risk and TAVR in older patients with high/prohibitive surgical risk. Compared with SAVR, patients undergoing TAVR were older (p<0.001), more often female (p=0.046) and more often had CAD (47.4% vs 10.2%, p<0.001) or previous hospital admission for CHF (37.2% vs 9.8%, p<0.001). The STS risk score was higher in patients undergoing TAVR (5.22 vs 2.45). QoL at baseline was lower in the TAVR cohort, as indicated by the mean overall TASQ score (67.1 vs 75.3, p<0.001), KCCQ score (52.4 vs 68.1, p<0.001) and SF-12v2 score (36.9 vs 42.4, p<0.001) (table 1). On a descriptive basis, TAVR had a relatively higher improvement of the patients who had TASQ than those who had SAVR, which was particularly evident at discharge and 30 days. Despite these differences and the ones at baseline, the difference in the TASQ between patients who underwent TAVR and SAVR was small at 3 months.

Discussion

This study demonstrated that the TASQ captured changes in QoL among patients with severe symptomatic AS who were treated with TAVR or SAVR. Changes were detected soon after intervention—from the time of hospital discharge in patients undergoing TAVR and from 30 days postintervention in patients who underwent SAVR. QoL improved substantially after TAVR and SAVR, as indicated by changes in the TASQ overall score at 3 months. Significant improvements were also seen in four of the five individual TASQ domains (physical symptoms, physical limitations, emotional impact and social limitations) at this time point. The potential benefits of AV interventions on QoL for patients with AS have been demonstrated in previous studies, using a variety of QoL tools.5–9 14 17–19 The TASQ is the first AS-specific QoL instrument to be developed12 and has been validated for use in patients undergoing TAVR and SAVR.10 11 The results of the current study add to the body of evidence about the TASQ. The main analysis of the study, which combined the TAVR and SAVR cohorts, found that the TASQ was a responsive measure of QoL in patients with severe AS and was sensitive to changes from discharge up to 3 months after AV interventions.11 The overall TASQ score increased significantly, with improvements seen in the domains of physical symptoms, physical limitations, emotional impact and social limitations at 3 months.11 The results of the current analyses of the separate TAVR and SAVR cohorts are generally consistent with the principal analysis. The overall TASQ score improved significantly in both cohorts at 3 months, as did scores for the physical symptoms, physical limitations, emotional impact, and social limitations domains. The health expectations domain worsened in both cohorts in the current analysis. A slight decrease in this domain was also seen in the combined analysis.11 In the current study, a QoL benefit was seen as early as discharge in the TAVR cohort, but not the SAVR cohort, which may be related to the type of intervention. All patients undergoing TAVR underwent TF-TAVR. Comparative studies and a meta-analysis have reported a short-term QoL advantage with TF-TAVR (but not with other TAVR routes) compared with SAVR.5 8 9 17 20 Various QoL instruments were used in these studies, such as the KCCQ, the generic SF-12 or SF-36, and EuroQol 5 Dimension. Studies comparing TF-TAVR and SAVR in patients at high or intermediate surgical risk found that the advantage did not persist in the long term; after 6–12 months, there was no significant difference in QoL benefit between TAVR and SAVR.5 8 9 17 However, a study involving patients with severe AS at low surgical risk found that TF-TAVR was associated with better health status (assessed using the KCCQ) compared with SAVR at 1, 6 and 12 months postintervention.20 The significant differences in baseline characteristics between the TAVR and SAVR cohorts precluded formal statistical comparison of changes in TASQ scores between these groups in the current analysis because adequate adjustment/propensity score matching was not feasible. Patients undergoing TAVR were older, predominantly female, and had a higher prevalence of CAD and rhythm disturbances. Carotid artery stenosis, cerebrovascular disease and peripheral vascular disease were also more common in patients undergoing TAVR, and surgical risk scores were higher. These differences likely accounted for the lower overall QoL seen in patients undergoing TAVR at baseline (as indicated by TASQ, KCCQ and SF-12v2 scores). Despite a formal comparison not being possible, a few points of potential interest were noted. Although the TASQ overall score was substantially lower at baseline in the TAVR group, only a small difference in scores was seen between the TAVR and SAVR groups at 3 months. A significant improvement versus baseline was seen at discharge in the TAVR cohort, but only from 30 days in the SAVR cohort. The magnitude of the improvement in overall TASQ score during the 3 months postintervention also appeared to be greater in the TAVR cohort. Taken together, these findings suggest that patients undergoing TAVR gained on patients who had SAVR in terms of their QoL during the first 3 months post-intervention.

Strengths and limitations

Recruitment was aimed at facilitating equal distribution of patient numbers across different languages. Patients were evaluated to make sure they had the cognitive ability to complete the questionnaires. The TAVR group only included patients who underwent TF-TAVR as this was the standard procedure used at participating centres. Comparison of changes in TASQ between TAVR and SAVR recipients was attempted, as recruitment was intentionally not limited to comparable cases as this would have excluded surgery in young patients with low surgical risk and TAVR in older patients with high or prohibitive surgical risk.

Conclusions

The TASQ captured changes in QoL among patients with severe symptomatic AS who were treated with TAVR or SAVR. Furthermore, the results suggest that the TASQ reflects changes earlier after an intervention, particularly after TAVR. QoL improved substantially after both TAVR and SAVR, as indicated by changes in the TASQ overall score at 3 months.
  20 in total

1.  Quality-of-Life Outcomes After Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement in an Unselected Population: A Report From the STS/ACC Transcatheter Valve Therapy Registry.

Authors:  Suzanne V Arnold; John A Spertus; Sreekanth Vemulapalli; Zhuokai Li; Roland A Matsouaka; Suzanne J Baron; Amit N Vora; Michael J Mack; Matthew R Reynolds; John S Rumsfeld; David J Cohen
Journal:  JAMA Cardiol       Date:  2017-04-01       Impact factor: 14.676

2.  A 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey: construction of scales and preliminary tests of reliability and validity.

Authors:  J Ware; M Kosinski; S D Keller
Journal:  Med Care       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 2.983

Review 3.  2017 AHA/ACC Focused Update of the 2014 AHA/ACC Guideline for the Management of Patients With Valvular Heart Disease: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Clinical Practice Guidelines.

Authors:  Rick A Nishimura; Catherine M Otto; Robert O Bonow; Blase A Carabello; John P Erwin; Lee A Fleisher; Hani Jneid; Michael J Mack; Christopher J McLeod; Patrick T O'Gara; Vera H Rigolin; Thoralf M Sundt; Annemarie Thompson
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2017-03-15       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Use of the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire for monitoring health status in patients with aortic stenosis.

Authors:  Suzanne V Arnold; John A Spertus; Yang Lei; Keith B Allen; Adnan K Chhatriwalla; Martin B Leon; Craig R Smith; Matthew R Reynolds; John G Webb; Lars G Svensson; David J Cohen
Journal:  Circ Heart Fail       Date:  2012-12-10       Impact factor: 8.790

5.  Health-related quality of life after transcatheter or surgical aortic valve replacement in high-risk patients with severe aortic stenosis: results from the PARTNER (Placement of AoRTic TraNscathetER Valve) Trial (Cohort A).

Authors:  Matthew R Reynolds; Elizabeth A Magnuson; Kaijun Wang; Vinod H Thourani; Mathew Williams; Alan Zajarias; Charanjit S Rihal; David L Brown; Craig R Smith; Martin B Leon; David J Cohen
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2012-07-18       Impact factor: 24.094

6.  Health Status After Transcatheter or Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement in Patients With Severe Aortic Stenosis at Increased Surgical Risk: Results From the CoreValve US Pivotal Trial.

Authors:  Suzanne V Arnold; Matthew R Reynolds; Kaijun Wang; Elizabeth A Magnuson; Suzanne J Baron; Khaja M Chinnakondepalli; Michael J Reardon; Peter N Tadros; George L Zorn; Brij Maini; Mubashir A Mumtaz; John M Brown; Robert M Kipperman; David H Adams; Jeffrey J Popma; David J Cohen
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2015-08-17       Impact factor: 11.195

7.  Health Status Benefits of Transcatheter vs Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement in Patients With Severe Aortic Stenosis at Intermediate Surgical Risk: Results From the PARTNER 2 Randomized Clinical Trial.

Authors:  Suzanne J Baron; Suzanne V Arnold; Kaijun Wang; Elizabeth A Magnuson; Khaja Chinnakondepali; Raj Makkar; Howard C Herrmann; Susheel Kodali; Vinod H Thourani; Samir Kapadia; Lars Svensson; David L Brown; Michael J Mack; Craig R Smith; Martin B Leon; David J Cohen
Journal:  JAMA Cardiol       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 14.676

8.  Comparison of the short form (SF)-12 health status instrument with the SF-36 in patients with coronary heart disease.

Authors:  J Müller-Nordhorn; S Roll; S N Willich
Journal:  Heart       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 5.994

9.  Trial protocol for the validation of the 'Toronto Aortic Stenosis Quality of Life (TASQ) Questionnaire' in patients undergoing surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) or transfemoral (TF) transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI): the TASQ registry.

Authors:  Derk Frank; Simon Kennon; Nikolaos Bonaros; Mauro Romano; Thierry Lefèvre; Carlo Di Mario; Pierluigi Stefàno; Flavio Luciano Ribichini; Dominique Himbert; Marina Urena-Alcazar; Jorge Salgado-Fernandez; Jose Joaquin Cuenca Castillo; Bruno Garcia; Jana Kurucova; Martin Thoenes; Claudia Lüske; Peter Bramlage; Rima Styra
Journal:  Open Heart       Date:  2019-05-21

10.  Toronto aortic stenosis quality of life questionnaire (TASQ): validation in TAVI patients.

Authors:  Rima Styra; Michelle Dimas; Kathy Svitak; Mamta Kapoor; Mark Osten; Maral Ouzounian; Gerald Devins; Amy Deckert; Eric Horlick
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2020-05-05       Impact factor: 2.298

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.