ATHENS1964
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2019
- Messages
- 510
That's probably big numbers illusion (the study database has 42000 patients).leaves me again asking what is younger when the mean age was 75 and so -5.7 years isn't what I call young; I'm nearly 10 years younger than their youngest and I'm not calling myself young.
agreed.But in any case it's crystal clear we are in a disease of elderly patients
from so many angles ;-)It’s weird learning what an outlier I remain even after meeting this community.
Heart disease and heart defects is at all ages. I was born with my heart defect, heart murmur and the Birth defect of the aortic valve. Not from old age.That's probably big numbers illusion (the study database has 42000 patients).
5.7 is one standard deviation. I round it to 6 in my example below.
Assuming normal distribution (which is very likely not the case):
Most likely, data are skewed somehow towards the lower values with sporadic values / outliers in the young adult ages (20-50).
- ~34%: 69-75
- ~34%: 75-81
- ~14%: 63-69
- ~14%: 81-87
- ~2.5%: 57-63
- ~2.5%: 87-93
Population means and standard deviations are such poor metrics... I wish we had access to the actual raw data from all these studies rather than aggregated massaged statistics.
But in any case it's crystal clear we are in a disease of elderly patients
Sure, if you didn't already know this I would be stunned. We got here because urban surgeons in busy medical centers are very confident doing open heart surgery on patients up to 75 and a little past that who are healthy for their age. Indeed, they are confident doing a third open heart at that age but they want that one to be the last one. What is happening now is the tavi docs, interventional cardiologists usually, are in a turf war with surgeons.some interesting wording from the study that was cited within the above joint statement
https://www.annalsthoracicsurgery.org/article/S0003-4975(23)01064-0/fulltext
bold mine
RESULTSThe mean age was 74.3±5.7 years and mean STS PROM was 1.9%±0.8%. The overall Kaplan-Meier time to event analysis for all-cause mortality at 1-, 3-, 5-, and 8-years was 2.6%, 4.5%, 7.1% and 12.4%, respectively. In subset analyses, survival was significantly better for 1) lower STS PROM (p<0.001), 2) younger versus older age (p<0.001), and 3) higher versus lower LVEF (p<0.001). When STS PROM was below 1% or the patient age was below age 75 years, the 8-year survival following SAVR was 95%.
CONCLUSIONSThe results of this national study confirm that the long-term survival following SAVR remains excellent, at 92.9% at 5 years. These contemporary longitudinal data serve to aid in the balanced interpretation of current and future trials comparing SAVR and TAVR and may assist in the clinical decision-making process for patients of lower surgical risk.leaves me again asking what is younger when the mean age was 75 and so -5.7 years isn't what I call young; I'm nearly 10 years younger than their youngest and I'm not calling myself young.
View attachment 889653
but still, very interesting stuff
I wish that the US guidelines were as cautious as the EU guidelines. As you point out, in EU, the guidelines state that TAVI should be considered in those 75+ and in the US, it is to be considered in those 65+. I agree with the commentary, that there is not sufficient data to push for TAVI first in low risk patients yet. Perhaps we should also consider how much the industry lobby influences changes in the US guidelines.They just should have said we think there is nothing in this data to undermine current standards which is get a savr up to 75 in most cases. The USA standard is 65 but these are the Euro guys writing.
Mine was congenital, and I suspect that many of us here also have had congenital heart issues. I was born with a bicuspid aortic valve.Heart disease and heart defects is at all ages. I was born with my heart defect, heart murmur and the Birth defect of the aortic valve. Not from old age.
FWIW - they're now running commercials for TAVR on local (and probably national across the U.S.) television. I don't know if I've seen these ads on over the air channels.I wish that the US guidelines were as cautious as the EU guidelines. As you point out, in EU, the guidelines state that TAVI should be considered in those 75+ and in the US, it is to be considered in those 65+. I agree with the commentary, that there is not sufficient data to push for TAVI first in low risk patients yet. Perhaps we should also consider how much the industry lobby influences changes in the US guidelines.
How old were you at your first OHS?Heart disease and heart defects is at all ages.
the point is that for the average person these defects (which are congenital) manifest later in life. If they manifested too early in life then the gene would leave the genepool because people would die before having and raising kids.I was born with my heart defect, heart murmur and the Birth defect of the aortic valve. Not from old age.
Medtronic and Edwards have made some excellent tavi valves. It's also probable that most folks can get a second one inside the first one. Already, this hypothetically looks like savr 12 years, tavi 10 years, tavi 10 years. So one open heart, no anti coagulation in theory, and you get 30+ years. But then you need a surgery that is very high risk for now.I wish that the US guidelines were as cautious as the EU guidelines. As you point out, in EU, the guidelines state that TAVI should be considered in those 75+ and in the US, it is to be considered in those 65+. I agree with the commentary, that there is not sufficient data to push for TAVI first in low risk patients yet. Perhaps we should also consider how much the industry lobby influences changes in the US guidelines.
personally I think that while the primary purpose of this place support, discussion and learning is also of significance.I have to retract my comment above as the clinical trial seems to have some interesting exclusion criteria eg Aortic valve is unicuspid, bicuspid, or non-calcified
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