The 2011-2012 pilot European Society of Cardiology Sentinel Registry of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation: 12-month clinical outcomes.
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Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
27173867
Description
AIMS
Our aim was to assess one-year outcomes of patients enrolled in the pilot European Sentinel Registry of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI).
METHODS AND RESULTS
One-year outcomes of 4,571 patients (81.4±7.2 years, 2,291 [50.1%] male) receiving TAVI with the SAPIEN XT (57.3%) or CoreValve prosthesis at 137 European centres were analysed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards regression techniques. At one year, 3,341 patients were alive, 821 had died, and 409 were lost to follow-up. Of 2,125 patients who underwent functional assessment, 1,916 (90%) were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class I/II at one year, with functional improvement from baseline noted in 1,682 patients (88%). One-year survival based on 4,564 patients was estimated at 79.1%. Independent baseline predictors of mortality were increasing age and logistic EuroSCORE, the presence of NYHA III/IV, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and atrial fibrillation. Female gender was associated with a 4% survival benefit at one year. Vascular access routes other than transfemoral were associated with poorer survival. Procedural failure and major periprocedural complications had an adverse impact on survival.
CONCLUSIONS
Contemporary European experience attests to the effectiveness of routine TAVI in unselected elderly patients.
Our aim was to assess one-year outcomes of patients enrolled in the pilot European Sentinel Registry of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI).
METHODS AND RESULTS
One-year outcomes of 4,571 patients (81.4±7.2 years, 2,291 [50.1%] male) receiving TAVI with the SAPIEN XT (57.3%) or CoreValve prosthesis at 137 European centres were analysed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards regression techniques. At one year, 3,341 patients were alive, 821 had died, and 409 were lost to follow-up. Of 2,125 patients who underwent functional assessment, 1,916 (90%) were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class I/II at one year, with functional improvement from baseline noted in 1,682 patients (88%). One-year survival based on 4,564 patients was estimated at 79.1%. Independent baseline predictors of mortality were increasing age and logistic EuroSCORE, the presence of NYHA III/IV, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and atrial fibrillation. Female gender was associated with a 4% survival benefit at one year. Vascular access routes other than transfemoral were associated with poorer survival. Procedural failure and major periprocedural complications had an adverse impact on survival.
CONCLUSIONS
Contemporary European experience attests to the effectiveness of routine TAVI in unselected elderly patients.
Date of Publication
2016-05-17
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Gilard, Martine | |
Schlüter, Michael | |
Snow, Thomas M | |
Dall'Ara, Gianni | |
Eltchaninoff, Helene | |
Moat, Neil | |
Goicolea, Javier | |
Ussia, Gian Paolo | |
Kala, Petr | |
Zembala, Marian | |
Nickenig, Georg | |
Price, Susanna | |
Alegria Barrero, Eduardo | |
Iung, Bernard | |
Zamorano, Pepe | |
Schuler, Gerhard | |
Corti, Roberto | |
Alfieri, Ottavio | |
Prendergast, Bernard | |
Ludman, Peter | |
Sabate, Manel | |
Witkowski, Adam | |
Danenberg, Haim | |
Schroeder, Erwin | |
Romeo, Francesco | |
Macaya, Carlos | |
Derumeaux, Geneviève | |
Laroche, Cécile | |
Pighi, Michele | |
Serdoz, Roberta | |
Di Mario, Carlo |
Additional Credits
Series
EuroIntervention
Publisher
Europa Digital & Publishing
ISSN
1774-024X
Access(Rights)
metadata.only