| Literature DB >> 36176308 |
Vikash Jaiswal1, Nida Khan2, Akash Jaiswal3, Mehak Dagar4, Amey Joshi1, Helen Huang5, Hira Naz6, Abdelrahman M Attia7, Mohammed Ghanim8, Abiram Baburaj9, David Song10.
Abstract
Introduction: Although aortic valve replacement in severe symptomatic Aortic Stenosis (AS) are clearly outlined, the role of surgical intervention in asymptomatic severe AS remains unclear with limited evidence. The aim of our meta-analysis is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of early surgical aortic valve repair compared to conservative management.Entities:
Keywords: ACM, All-cause mortality; Asymptomatic Aortic Stenosis; Conservative management; HF, Heart failure; MI, Myocardial infarction; Mortality; NA, Not available; OR, Odds ratio; Outcomes; PSM, Propensity score match; RCT, Randomized controlled trial; SCD, Sudden Cardiac Death
Year: 2022 PMID: 36176308 PMCID: PMC9513172 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcha.2022.101125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc ISSN: 2352-9067
Baseline characteristic of included studies arranged in early surgery vs conservative management form.
| Study Design | RCT | RCT | PSM | Prospective | Prospective |
| Sample Size | 78/79 | 73/72 | 291/291 | 221/247 | 102/95 |
| Age, Mean (SD) | 68/69.12 | 65/63.4 | 71.6/77.8 | 61/67.1 | 63/63 |
| Male, % | 59/55.7 | 37/34 | 43.30/42.6 | 50/51 | 54/46 |
| Follow up, Years | 2.3/2.1 | 6.2/6.1 | 3.7/3.7 | 5.1/5.1 | 4.1/4.1 |
| Aortic Stenosis Type | Severe | Very Severe | Severe | Severe | Very Severe |
| Inclusion Criteria | Asymptomatic patients. | Asymptomatic patients. | Asymptomatic Patients. | Asymptomatic patients. | Asymptomatic patients .AVA ≤ 0.75 cm2 plus either Vmax ≥ 4.5 m/s or MAG ≥ 50 mmHg |
| DM, n | 14/23 | 13/7 | 59/66 | 37/66 | 10/10 |
| HTN, n | 69/70 | 40/39 | 188/187 | 92/122 | 37/39 |
| Dyslipidemia, n | 31/28 | 41/42 | 116/83 | – | – |
| CAD, n | 1/3 | 5/1 | 61/74 | 32/17 | – |
| PVD, n | 0/1 | 1/2 | 23/31 | 2/4 | – |
| Previous Stroke, n | 2/2 | 3/3 | – | 9/34 | – |
| Atrial Fibrillation, n | – | 3/6 | 39/40 | 19/34 | – |
| Bicuspid Aortic Valve, n | – | 49/39 | – | 126/63 | 57/39 |
| Degenerative valvular disease, n | – | 22/26 | – | – | 33/45 |
| Rheumatic Heart Disease, n | – | 2/7 | – | 25/42 | 12/11 |
| LV mass index g/m2, (Mean) | 160.95/148.37 | 135.6/133.7 | – | – | 158/159 |
| LVEF% | 68.25/67.75 | 64.8/64.8 | 66.8/68.2 | 63.7/63.1 | 62/63 |
| AVA, cm2 (Mean) | 0.69/0.72 | 0.63/0.64 | 0.67/0.75 | 0.74/0.80 | 0.61/0.62 |
Fig. 1Primary outcome forest plot- random effect of all-cause mortality.
Fig. 2Forest plot of A) Cardiovascular Mortality, and B) Sudden Cardiac Death.
Fig. 3Forest plot of Heart Failure.
Fig. 4Forest plot of A) Clinical thromboembolic events, B) Major Bleeding, C) Myocardial Infarction, D) Stroke.
Fig. 5Central illustration for primary and secondary outcomes among early surgery vs conservative groups. (Original image created with biorender.com)