Impact of Complex Anatomy and Patient Risk Profile in Minimally Invasive Mitral Valve Surgery

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Paolo Berretta - , Marche Polytechnic University (Author)
  • Antonios Pitsis - , European Interbalkan Medical Center Thessaloniki (Author)
  • Nikolaos Bonaros - , Innsbruck Medical University (Author)
  • Jorg Kempfert - , Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin (Author)
  • Manuel Wilbring - , Clinic for Cardiosurgery (at the Heart Center) (Author)
  • Pierluigi Stefano - , Careggi University Hospital (Author)
  • Frank Van Praet - , OLV Hospital Aalst (Author)
  • Joseph Lamelas - , University of Miami Miller School of Medicine (Author)
  • Pietro G Malvindi - , Marche Polytechnic University (Author)
  • Marc Gerdisch - , Franciscan Health Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana. (Author)
  • Davide Pacini - , Sant’Orsola-Malpighi Polyclinic (Author)
  • Tristan Yan - , Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (Author)
  • Mauro Rinaldi - , University of Turin (Author)
  • Loris Salvador - , San Bortolo Hospital (Author)
  • Antonio Fiore - , Hôpital Henri Mondor (Author)
  • Torsten Doenst - , Jena University Hospital (Author)
  • Nguyen Hoang Dinh - , University of Medicine and Pharmacy at Ho Chi Minh City (Author)
  • Tom C Nguyen - , McGovern Medical School (Author)
  • Marco Di Eusanio - , Marche Polytechnic University (Author)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We aimed to assess the impact of complex mitral valve disease and patient risk profile on operative outcomes in the large cohort of the Mini-Mitral International Registry.

METHODS: Patients were assigned to categories of complex degenerative mitral valve regurgitation (DMR; bileaflet or anterior mitral leaflet prolapse/flail) and simple DMR (posterior mitral leaflet prolapse/flail). Subgroup analyses was performed in low-risk (EuroSCORE II <8%) and high-risk (EuroSCORE II >8%) cohorts. A logistic regression model was applied to investigate the impact of valve anatomy and patient risk factors on valve repair rate and operative risk.

RESULTS: The study cohort consisted of 4524 patients with DMR (complex DMR, 1296; simple DMR, 3228). Valve repair rate was 87.3% and 91% in complex DMR and simple DMR, respectively. Predictors of valve replacement were anterior leaflet prolapse/flail, bileaflet flail, female sex, age, and reoperation, whereas Barlow disease was protective. Clinical results were comparable between complex DMR and simple DMR. On subgroup analyses, high-risk patients showed less satisfactory outcomes with respect to both the valve repair and operative mortality rates.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that complex DMR can be satisfactorily addressed by minimally invasive techniques. However, whereas complex disease was associated with low operative risk, anterior leaflet lesions and bileaflet flail remain negative predictors of successful valve repair. Conversely, valve repair rate was less satisfactory in high-risk patients, regardless of DMR complexity.

Details

Original languageEnglish
JournalThe annals of thoracic surgery
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 30 Aug 2024
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85204502184

Keywords