coryp
Well-known member
Hello all,
Some background. im 45, had avr and aneurysm repair/root remodel 11 yrs ago. Have found out in October that i should prepare for another surgery as the valve is starting to calcify. Was not ready then and still not ready, i delayed and have been monitoring every three months. I had a bovine valve put in with the intention of Tavr technology being my next step. According to my surgeon it is still not for me and we need to do a 2nd ohs now and then most certainly in 10-15 yrs tavr will be my option.
I have been reading and researching and reached out to my old cardio whom suggested i meet the lead guy and most experienced tavi guy in the world who is at cedars and discuss the possibilities now and later.
I went for my Echo yesterday and it has become worse, i followed that visit with a trip to cedars to meet this Dr.
The below is an email i sent my cardiologist last night regarding my visit to Dr Makkar (The person who has done the most tavi in the world to date)
I did my echo yesterday and went to see Dr Makkar. Echo shows AI and AS and leakage is still moderate. EF now around (not confirmed) 55-60 vs 55-65 as per last.
He was the 1st to see it and says take it easy and its almost time say mid June to early July would be my LIMIT.
When i saw Dr Makkar he reviewed all and was wondering why Dr Raissi and Trento did not suggest this option which best suits me? He feels i am intermediate risk based on my aortic root and arch done back during the 1st surgery. He said that he should be able to give me another 12-14 years conservatively with 2 tavi procedures using SAPIEN 3, first will be the norm then tavi in tavi for the 2nd. He wants to do the ct scan and Angiogram to confirm i'm the perfect candidate and would then go back to Dr raissi and Trento and seek there approval for treatment
Ultimately i WILL have to undergo another OHS at some point it appears so this is only a bridge, either next month or in 12-14 years when the 2nd valve goes and there is no more space to do another tavi, some questions come to mind:
will there be a large difference doing the OHS at 45 vs 58-60? MAkkar says almost none.
I guess it comes down to surgery now or later, and why later would be a better option (if i live that long)?
I think i have been trying to avoid the dreaded third ohs with all the surgical risks and scar tissue etc, does 2 TAVI procedures over 12 -14 years present less risk than a 3rd OHS ?
Of course i think (probably because i am scared of this surgery a 2nd time) that delaying until 60 when i'm most likely retired and have far less things going on sounds like the better option as well as maintaining my healthy life style with less risk and less metal in me to close the sternum up again.
Another point is that now that Tavr seems prevalent now and certainly in the future, is the thought of mechanical valve for ME almost out the window in your opinion?
If i did mechanical as some suggest, i should be done and no more procedures, if i do ohs, then i can probably have and do 2 tavi and that should get me to 72-74 and same if i do 2 tavi and ohs i should get to the same point + have the option to do another tavi if I can live until 80??
I would appreciate your opinions on my decision as i have not made 1 yet....
Here is his response: The decision matrix depends on the “Heart Team” that is managing your case. For example, I would not be comfortable sending you to another regional hospital in Southern California for TAVR given the expertise available at Cedars.
The approach recommended by Dr.xx is the “Gold Standard” surgical approach with the most data and predictable outcomes as he discussed. TAVR in this situation is a new modality with a track record that has less foundation.
I believe both options are reasonable under the circumstance with the caveats you have already outlined in your note below.
Dr. Makkar had planned to consult with Dr. Raissi and Dr. Trento once all the data was available. I would defer your own decision till you hear the consensus opinion.
I am curious that some of your thoughts and opinions are on this as well as some of the unanswered questions.....
I also understand that the decision to even have tavi will not be an easy 1 to get approved as the trial is for hi risk patients over 65 that have mdeicare, i do not qualify for any BUT he felt that if he could get both surgeons approval and buy in that he would have a good chance to sell it as intermediate risk and get it approved.....
Thank you for reading.
I am really struggling here.
Some background. im 45, had avr and aneurysm repair/root remodel 11 yrs ago. Have found out in October that i should prepare for another surgery as the valve is starting to calcify. Was not ready then and still not ready, i delayed and have been monitoring every three months. I had a bovine valve put in with the intention of Tavr technology being my next step. According to my surgeon it is still not for me and we need to do a 2nd ohs now and then most certainly in 10-15 yrs tavr will be my option.
I have been reading and researching and reached out to my old cardio whom suggested i meet the lead guy and most experienced tavi guy in the world who is at cedars and discuss the possibilities now and later.
I went for my Echo yesterday and it has become worse, i followed that visit with a trip to cedars to meet this Dr.
The below is an email i sent my cardiologist last night regarding my visit to Dr Makkar (The person who has done the most tavi in the world to date)
I did my echo yesterday and went to see Dr Makkar. Echo shows AI and AS and leakage is still moderate. EF now around (not confirmed) 55-60 vs 55-65 as per last.
He was the 1st to see it and says take it easy and its almost time say mid June to early July would be my LIMIT.
When i saw Dr Makkar he reviewed all and was wondering why Dr Raissi and Trento did not suggest this option which best suits me? He feels i am intermediate risk based on my aortic root and arch done back during the 1st surgery. He said that he should be able to give me another 12-14 years conservatively with 2 tavi procedures using SAPIEN 3, first will be the norm then tavi in tavi for the 2nd. He wants to do the ct scan and Angiogram to confirm i'm the perfect candidate and would then go back to Dr raissi and Trento and seek there approval for treatment
Ultimately i WILL have to undergo another OHS at some point it appears so this is only a bridge, either next month or in 12-14 years when the 2nd valve goes and there is no more space to do another tavi, some questions come to mind:
will there be a large difference doing the OHS at 45 vs 58-60? MAkkar says almost none.
I guess it comes down to surgery now or later, and why later would be a better option (if i live that long)?
I think i have been trying to avoid the dreaded third ohs with all the surgical risks and scar tissue etc, does 2 TAVI procedures over 12 -14 years present less risk than a 3rd OHS ?
Of course i think (probably because i am scared of this surgery a 2nd time) that delaying until 60 when i'm most likely retired and have far less things going on sounds like the better option as well as maintaining my healthy life style with less risk and less metal in me to close the sternum up again.
Another point is that now that Tavr seems prevalent now and certainly in the future, is the thought of mechanical valve for ME almost out the window in your opinion?
If i did mechanical as some suggest, i should be done and no more procedures, if i do ohs, then i can probably have and do 2 tavi and that should get me to 72-74 and same if i do 2 tavi and ohs i should get to the same point + have the option to do another tavi if I can live until 80??
I would appreciate your opinions on my decision as i have not made 1 yet....
Here is his response: The decision matrix depends on the “Heart Team” that is managing your case. For example, I would not be comfortable sending you to another regional hospital in Southern California for TAVR given the expertise available at Cedars.
The approach recommended by Dr.xx is the “Gold Standard” surgical approach with the most data and predictable outcomes as he discussed. TAVR in this situation is a new modality with a track record that has less foundation.
I believe both options are reasonable under the circumstance with the caveats you have already outlined in your note below.
Dr. Makkar had planned to consult with Dr. Raissi and Dr. Trento once all the data was available. I would defer your own decision till you hear the consensus opinion.
I am curious that some of your thoughts and opinions are on this as well as some of the unanswered questions.....
I also understand that the decision to even have tavi will not be an easy 1 to get approved as the trial is for hi risk patients over 65 that have mdeicare, i do not qualify for any BUT he felt that if he could get both surgeons approval and buy in that he would have a good chance to sell it as intermediate risk and get it approved.....
Thank you for reading.
I am really struggling here.