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- Dec 5, 2020
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I believe this is the first study published comparing the outcomes for TAVR vs SAVR, for procedure #2 tissue valve patients. Getting TAVR on #2 is often caled Valve in Valve Transcatheter, because the TAVR valve goes inside the old bioproshetic valve.
The findings are striking:
"ViV-TAVR was associated with higher rates of late mortality and heart failure hospitalization."
Not slightly higher, but much higher:
"no difference in mortality was observed up to 2 years (hazard ratio, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.59-1.78), but after 2 years, ViV-TAVR was associated with higher mortality (hazard ratio, 2.97; 95% CI, 1.18-7.47) as well as with a higher incidence of heart failure hospitalization (hazard ratio, 3.81; 95% CI, 1.57-9.22)."
That is correct. 2.97 hazard ratio for valve in valve TAVR vs SAVR after year 2 for all cause mortality. That represents a 2.97x greater rate of mortality. Incidence of heart failure hospitalization was also striking at hazard ratio of 3.81 for TAVR= 3.81x the risk as compared to SAVR.
I have the link to the study below and am also attaching a PDF which has more details and discussion about the study.
"Although the most recent international guidelines recommend ViV-TAVR for patients with failed bioprosthesis who are symptomatic or at high or prohibitive surgical risk,13,14 the rapid increase in the use of ViV-TAVR (10-fold over a period of 5 years) suggests that indication creep to other populations without an adequate evidence base may be occurring."
Many on our forum have come to the boards facing procedure #2 in their 40s, 50s and 60s, dissappointed that they were not eligible for TAVR (aka TAVI) on procedure #2, a hope which they were givin at the time of procedure #1. This new study suggests that, unless you are a patient at high risk for OHS, these individuals might be better off with SAVR. As always, more studies are needed.
TAVR will continue to advance and likely improvements will be made, but for procedure #2 it does not appear that the data is currently there yet to suggest that this is the best way to go for most patients. As suggested by the commentary from this study, it does appear that the rapid expansion of valve in valve TAVR got ahead of the evidence.
The findings are striking:
"ViV-TAVR was associated with higher rates of late mortality and heart failure hospitalization."
Not slightly higher, but much higher:
"no difference in mortality was observed up to 2 years (hazard ratio, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.59-1.78), but after 2 years, ViV-TAVR was associated with higher mortality (hazard ratio, 2.97; 95% CI, 1.18-7.47) as well as with a higher incidence of heart failure hospitalization (hazard ratio, 3.81; 95% CI, 1.57-9.22)."
That is correct. 2.97 hazard ratio for valve in valve TAVR vs SAVR after year 2 for all cause mortality. That represents a 2.97x greater rate of mortality. Incidence of heart failure hospitalization was also striking at hazard ratio of 3.81 for TAVR= 3.81x the risk as compared to SAVR.
I have the link to the study below and am also attaching a PDF which has more details and discussion about the study.
"Although the most recent international guidelines recommend ViV-TAVR for patients with failed bioprosthesis who are symptomatic or at high or prohibitive surgical risk,13,14 the rapid increase in the use of ViV-TAVR (10-fold over a period of 5 years) suggests that indication creep to other populations without an adequate evidence base may be occurring."
Many on our forum have come to the boards facing procedure #2 in their 40s, 50s and 60s, dissappointed that they were not eligible for TAVR (aka TAVI) on procedure #2, a hope which they were givin at the time of procedure #1. This new study suggests that, unless you are a patient at high risk for OHS, these individuals might be better off with SAVR. As always, more studies are needed.
TAVR will continue to advance and likely improvements will be made, but for procedure #2 it does not appear that the data is currently there yet to suggest that this is the best way to go for most patients. As suggested by the commentary from this study, it does appear that the rapid expansion of valve in valve TAVR got ahead of the evidence.