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Year

  • 2015 (1)
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Author

  • Babaliaros, Vasilis (2)
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Search Results for all work with filters:

  • Miller, D. Craig
  • Health Sciences, General
  • Health Sciences, Medicine and Surgery
  • scienc
  • cardiolog

Work 1-2 of 2

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Article

Staging classification of aortic stenosis based on the extent of cardiac damage

by Philippe Genereux; Philippe Pibarot; Bjorn Redfors; Michael J. Mack; Raj R. Makkar; Wael A. Jaber; Lars G. Svensson; Samir Kapadia; E. Murat Tuzcu; Vinod Thourani; Vasilis Babaliaros; Howard C. Herrmann; Wilson Y. Szeto; David Jay Cohen; Brian R. Lindman; Thomas McAndrew; Maria C. Alu; Pamela S. Douglas; Rebecca T. Hahn; Susheel K. Kodali; Craig R. Smith; D. Craig Miller; John G. Webb; Martin B. Leon

2017

Subjects
  • Health Sciences, Medicine and Surgery
  • Health Sciences, General
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Abstract:Close

Aims In patients with aortic stenosis (AS), risk stratification for aortic valve replacement (AVR) relies mainly on valverelated factors, symptoms and co-morbidities. We sought to evaluate the prognostic impact of a newly-defined staging classification characterizing the extent of extravalvular (extra-aortic valve) cardiac damage among patients with severe AS undergoing AVR. Methods and results Patients with severe AS from the PARTNER 2 trials were pooled and classified according to the presence or absence of cardiac damage as detected by echocardiography prior to AVR: no extravalvular cardiac damage (Stage 0), left ventricular damage (Stage 1), left atrial or mitral valve damage (Stage 2), pulmonary vasculature or tricuspid valve damage (Stage 3), or right ventricular damage (Stage 4). One-year outcomes were compared using Kaplan- Meier techniques and multivariable Cox proportional hazards models were used to identify 1-year predictors of mortality. In 1661 patients with sufficient echocardiographic data to allow staging, 47 (2.8%) patients were classified as Stage 0, 212 (12.8%) as Stage 1, 844 (50.8%) as Stage 2, 413 (24.9%) as Stage 3, and 145 (8.7%) as Stage 4. Oneyear mortality was 4.4% in Stage 0, 9.2% in Stage 1, 14.4% in Stage 2, 21.3% in Stage 3, and 24.5% in Stage 4 (Ptrend < 0.0001). The extent of cardiac damage was independently associated with increased mortality after AVR (HR 1.46 per each increment in stage, 95% confidence interval 1.27-1.67, P < 0.0001). Conclusion This newly described staging classification objectively characterizes the extent of cardiac damage associated with AS and has important prognostic implications for clinical outcomes after AVR.

Article

Risk stratification in patients with pulmonary hypertension undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement

by Brian R. Lindman; Alan Zajarias; Hersh S. Maniar; D. Craig Miller; Rakesh M. Suri; Suzanne V. Arnold; John Webb; Lars G. Svensson; Susheel Kodali; Ke Xu; Girma M. Ayele; Fay Lin; Shing-Chiu Wong; Vasilis Babaliaros; Vinod Thourani; Pamela V. Douglas; Scott Lim; Martin B. Leon; Michael J. Mack

2015

Subjects
  • Health Sciences, Medicine and Surgery
  • Health Sciences, General
  • File Download
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Abstract:Close

Objective: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is associated with increased mortality after surgical or transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) for aortic stenosis (AS), and when the pulmonary artery pressure is particularly elevated, there may be questions about the clinical benefit of TAVR. We aimed to identify clinical and haemodynamic factors associated with increased mortality after TAVR among those with moderate/severe PH. Methods: Among patients with symptomatic AS at high or prohibitive surgical risk receiving TAVR in the Placement of Aortic Transcatheter Valves (PARTNER) I randomised trial or registry, 2180 patients with an invasive measurement of mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP) recorded were included, and moderate/severe PH was defined as an mPAP ≥35 mm Hg. Results: Increasing severity of PH was associated with progressively worse 1-year all-cause mortality: none (n=785, 18.6%), mild (n=838, 22.7%) and moderate/severe (n=557, 25.0%) (p=0.01). The increased hazard of mortality associated with moderate/severe PH was observed in females, but not males (interaction p=0.03). In adjusted analyses, females with moderate/severe PH had an increased hazard of death at 1 year compared with females without PH (adjusted HR 2.14, 95% CI 1.44 to 3.18), whereas those with mild PH did not. Among males, there was no increased hazard of death associated with any severity of PH. In a multivariable Cox model of patients with moderate/severe PH, oxygen-dependent lung disease, inability to perform a 6 min walk, impaired renal function and lower aortic valve mean gradient were independently associated with increased 1-year mortality (p<0.05 for all), whereas several haemodynamic indices were not. A risk score, including these factors, was able to identify patients with a 15% vs 59% 1-year mortality. Conclusions: The relationship between moderate/severe PH and increased mortality after TAVR is altered by sex, and clinical factors appear to be more influential in stratifying risk than haemodynamic indices. These findings may have implications for the evaluation of and treatment decisions for patients referred for TAVR with significant PH.
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