Title: Valve selection
1Valve selection
- Weerachai Nawarawong M.D.
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4Mechanical valve advantage
- Children
- Patients lt40 yrs
- High reoperation risk
- Small annular size
- Atrial fibrillation
- Pregnancy desired
- Patients gt 70 yrs
- High thromboembolism risk
- High hemorrhage risk
Tissue valve advantage
Akins CW Ann Thorac Surg 1991,52161-172
5Which valve ?
6- If one can choose the valve prosthesis one would
choose - One valve for life
7Myths about Mechanical Valves
- Youll Never Need Another Operation
- You can Live without Restrictions
- Risks of TE/ACH are Minimal
- Coumadin is Not a Problem
8Nine Commandmentsfor prosthetic valve
- Embolism Prevention
- Durability
- Ease and Security of Attachment
- Preservation of Surrounding Tissue Function
- Reduction of Turbulance
- Reduction of Blood Trauma
- Reduction of Noise
- Use of Materials Compatible with Blood
- Development of Methods of Storage and
Sterilization
9Ideal valve
- Good hemodynamic
- Quiet
- Require no anticoagulation
- Last for life time
- Cheap
- Easy to implant
10Valve Prosthesis
- Mechanical
- types caged-ball, tilting-disk, bi-leaflet
- advantage durability
- limitation thrombogenicity
- Bioprosthetic
- types heterografts, homografts
- advantage short term anticoagulation
- limitation structural failure
- leaflet calcification tissue degeneration
leading to valvular regurgitation - rate of porcine valve degeneration 26 (aortic),
39 (mitral) in 10 yrs
11Homografts
- 1956 - first aortic valve homograft was used in
the descending thoracic aorta for aortic
regurgitation - 1962 - first sub-coronary use
- high incidence of post-op failure
- (years) 5 10 15 20
- survival rate () 85 66 53 38
- re-operation () 22 62 85 95
Circulation 1991 84(suppl 3)III81-III88
12Durability and hemodynamic
Bleeding and thromboembolism
13Thromboembolism and Bleeding
14Wall Street Journal 8//16//07
- Warfarin is the second-most-likely drug, after
insulin, to send Americans to the emergency
room. - By one estimate, it accounts for 43,000 ER visits
a year in the U.S.
15- Van der Meer
- 42 more major bleeding complications for every
one-point increase in INR. - The incidence from major bleeding complications
given in the literature varies between 1.6 and
5.2 increasing with age
16Incidence of major embolismafter mechanical
valve replacement
- Absence of antithrombotic therapy
- 4 per year
- plus 1.8 per year risk of valve thrombosis
- Antiplatelet therapy
- 2.2 per year
- plus 1.6 per year risk of valve thrombosis
- Wafarin therapy
- 1 per year
- 0.8 per year with an aortic valve
- 1.3 per year with a mitral valve
- plus 0.2 per year risk of valve thrombosis
- Incidence of major bleeding in patients treated
with warfarin - 1.4 per 100 patient-years.
(Circulation. 199489635-641.)
17Incidence Rates of Valve Thrombosis and Major and
Total Embolisms Effect of Antithrombotic
Treatment Incidence Rates per 100
Patient-Years (95 Confidence Intervals) Anticoag
ulation Valve Thrombosis Major Embolism Total
Embollsm None 1.8 (0.9-3.0) 4.0 (2.9-5.2)
8.6 (7.0-10.4) Antiplatelet 1.6 (1.0-2.5) 2.2
(1.4-3.1) 8.2 (6.6-10.0) Dipyridamole 4.1
(1.9-7.2) 5.4 (2.8-8.8) 11.2 (7.3-15.9) Aspirin
1.0 (0.4-1.7) 1.4 (0.8-2.3) 7.5
(5.9-9.4) Coumadin 0.2 (0.2-0.2) 1.0 (1.0-1.1)
1.8 (1.7-1.9) Coumadin and antiplatelet 0.1
(0.0-0.3) 1.7 (1.1-2.3) 3.2 (2.4-4.1)
(Circulation. 199489635-641.)
18Incidence Rates of Valve Thrombosis and Major and
Total Embolisms With Coumadin Therapy Effect of
Valve Position Incidence Rates per 100
Patient-Years (95 Confidence Intervals) Valve
Position Valve Thrombosis Major Embolism
Total Embolism Aortic 0.1 (0.1-0.2) 0.8
(0.7-0.9) 1.1 (1.0-1.3) Mitral 0.5 (0.3-0.7)
1.3 (1.1-1.5) 2.7 (2.3-3.0) Both 0.4
(0.2-0.7) 1.4 (1.0-1.9) 2.1 (1.6-2.7)
(Circulation. 199489635-641.)
19Types of prosthetic valves and thrombogenicity Ty
pe of valve Model Thrombogenicity Mechanical
Caged ball StarrEdwards Single
tilting disc BjorkShiley, Medtronic
Hall Bileaflet St Jude
Medical, Sorin Bicarbon, Carbomedics
Bioprosthetic Heterografts CarpentierEdwards
, Tissue Med (Aspire), Hancock II to
Homografts
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22- Mitral heart valve prostheses carry a risk of
embolism that is almost twice as high as aortic
valve prostheses - Cannegieter SC, Rosendaal FR, Briet E (1994)
Thromboembolic and bleeding complications in
patients with mechanical heart valve prostheses.
Circulation 89 635641
23Zellner et al Long term experience With the
St.Jude Medical Valve Prosthesis South
Carolina,USA AVR 418 pts,
mean age 54.8yrs Re-operation inc. 1.0/pt/y
24Hemodynamic advantages
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27Gradient
Comparison of mean pressure gradients for
commonly implanted prosthetic valves.
28EOA
Comparison of EOAs for commonly implanted
prosthetic valves.
29Patient prosthesis mismatch
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32- There are trends in the United States and Europe
toward the increasing use of tissue rather than
mechanical valves and toward the use of
bioprostheses in progressively younger patients - Dagenais F, Cartier P, Voisine P, Desaulniers D,
Perron J, Maillot R, Raymond G, Métras J, Doyle
D, Mathieu P. Which biologic valve should we
select for the 45- to 65-year-old age group
requiring aortic valve replacement? J Thorac
Cardiovasc Surg. 200512910411049.
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34Reasons for increasing use of Bioprosthesis
- Newer generation bioprosthesis are more durable
and better. - Reoperation rates for patients over 65 years of
age are particularly low with modern stented
bioprostheses - The risks of reoperation have continued to
decrease - Patients undergoing AVR today are older
population than those studied in the randomized
trials. - Young patients undergoing aortic valve surgery
are often reluctant to accept warfarin therapy
and the activity constraints associated with
anticoagulants. - There are some nonrandomized but relatively large
comparative trials that have shown apparent
survival benefit for patients receiving
bioprostheses, particularly for those over the
age of 65 years .
35Why bioprosthesis
- Better fixation technique
- Better anticalcification technique
- Better long term result in newer generation valve
- Better surgical technique , redo less dangerous
36Durability
37- Two historic randomized clinical trials compared
outcomes after valve replacement with a
first-generation porcine heterograft and the
original Bjork-Shiley tilting-disc mechanical
valve - The Edinburgh Heart Valve Trial, conducted
between 1975 and 1979 with an average follow-up
of 12 years, - The Veteran Affairs (VA) Cooperative Study on
Valvular Heart Disease, conducted between 1979
and 1982 with an average follow-up of 15 years.
38- The Edinburgh trial
- a small survival advantage associated with a
mechanical valve in the aortic but not in the
mitral position - both trials showed
- increased bleeding associated with mechanical
valves - increased reoperation with tissue valves
- structural failure of tissue valves and overall
thromboembolic complications were greater after
mitral than after aortic valve replacement.
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46- A meta-analysis of 32 articles evaluated
mortality from 15 mechanical and 23 biological
valve series including 17,439 patients and 101,
819 patient-years of follow-up. - no difference in riskcorrected mortality between
mechanical and bioprosthetic aortic valves
regardless of patient age - choice between a tissue and mechanical valve
should not be based on age alone. - Lund O, Bland M. Risk-corrected impact of
mechanical versus bioprosthetic valves on
long-term mortality after aortic valve
replacement. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg.
200613220 26.
47- Retrospective study comparing mechanical and
tissue aortic valve replacement in 3062 patients
with combined follow-up of 22 182 patientyears - age but not valve type was predictive of
valve-related mortality. - reoperation was higher after tissue aortic valve
replacement only for patients 60 years of age, - combined valverelated morbidity was higher after
mechanical valve replacement for all patients 40
years of age. - Chan V, Jamieson WRE, Germann E, Chan F,
Miyagishima RT, Burr LH, Janusz MT, Ling H,
Fradet GJ. Performance of bioprostheses and
mechanical prostheses assessed by composite of
valve-related complications to 15 years after
aortic valve replacement. J Thorac Cardiovasc
Surg. 200613112671273.
48- Advances in tissue fixation and anticalcification
treatment have resulted in current-generation
bioprostheses that have superior durability
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50Freedom from structural valve deterioration
- Carpentier-Edwards pericardial aortic valve (age
65) - 94 at 10 years
- 77 at 15 years
- 10 chance that a 65-year-old patient would
require reoperation before 80 years of age. - Third-generation bioprostheses may be even more
durable, with - 92.8 at 12 years (mean age of 54 years)
- In addition, advances in myocardial protection
and cardiac surgical techniques have led to lower
risks at reoperation, making the prospect of redo
valve surgery less dangerous. - Banbury MK, Cosgrove DM III, White JA, Blackstone
EH, Frater RWM, Okies JE. Age and valve size
effect on the long-term durability of the
Carpentier-Edwards aortic pericardial
bioprosthesis. Ann Thorac Surg. 200172753757. - Bach DS, Metras J, Doty JR, Yun KL, Dumesnil JG,
Kon ND. Freedom from structural valve
deterioration among patients 60 years of age and
younger undergoing Freestyle aortic valve
replacement. J Heart Valve Dis. In press.
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53Freedom from structural valve deterioration after
15 years
- 2nd generation Hancock II aortic valve
- 81.5 ( age 65 years)
- 1st generation Hancock bioprosthesis.
- 57.4 (age 69 years )
- David TE, Ivanov J, Armstrong S, Feindel CM,
Cohen G. Late results of heart valve replacement
with the Hancock II bioprosthesis. J Thorac
Cardiovasc Surg. 2001121 268278. - Cohn LH, Collins JJ Jr, Rizzo RJ, Adams DH,
Couper GS, Aranki SF. Twenty-year follow-up of
the Hancock modified orifice porcine aortic
valve. Ann Thorac Surg. 1998 66(suppl)S30 S34.
54Hancock Valve Durability Data
55ACC/AHA VHD Guidelines 2008
56ACC/AHA VHD Guidelines 2008
57M.OBrien et al The Homograft Aortic Valve29
yrs J. Heart V. Dis 200110334-345 1,022
patients mean age 47yrs Actuarial Survival
58OBrien et al,2001 Aortic Homograft Durability vs
Age Freedom from Re-op
59Reasons for tissue valve
- Expected life expectancy lt 10-12 yrs
- Anticoagulation contraindicated.
- Patient cannot or will not take anticoagulant.
- Patient at increased risk for bleeding with
anticoagulation. - INR difficult to control
- Poor compliance
- Difficult follow up
60The main indication for re-operation of mitral
valve prostheses
- Structural deterioration of (tissue) valves,
- Endocarditis,
- Para- valvular defects,
- Valve thrombosis,
- Pannus formation
- Residual or recurrent tricuspid incompetence.
- Progressive coronary artery disease
61Risk factors for early mortality after reoperation
- Emergency operation for thrombosis of a
prosthesis, - Acute endocarditis,
- Acute valvular dehiscence with clinical
deterioration, and surgical problems. - Older age and NYHA class also play a major role
62Reoperation
- Single mitral valve re-replacement
- elective
- normal left and right ventricular function
- risk 1.5 .
- The peri-operative mortality with
- emergency operation up to 40,
- double valve replacement to 22,
- with poorer NYHA class, (from 2.2 to 15.5),
- concomitant procedures to 16
6350-year-old man with no comorbidities undergoing
aortic valve replacement
64Mechanical aortic valve replacement
- Anticipated, operative mortality is 1.5
EuroSCORE regardless of the prosthesis implanted.
- After mechanical valve replacement,
- 0.3/y chance of reoperation,yielding a 9 risk
of reoperation if the man lives to be 80 years of
age. - chance of death at reoperation is 24,assuming
that reoperation is done on an emergency basis at
65 years of age, yielding a 2.1 chance of death
at reoperation. - Valve-related mortality is
- 0.5/y for a patient 51 to 60 years of age
- 1.1/y in patients 61 years of age,
- yielding a cumulative risk of valverelated
mortality of 27 over 30 years (10 0.5)(20
1.1). - Valve-related morbidity
- 2.2/y for a patient 51 to 60 years of age,
- 2.7/y for a patient 61 to 70 years of age,
- 2.9/y for a patient 71 years of age,
- yielding a cumulative risk of valve-related
morbidity of 78 over 30 years, (10 2.2)(10
2.7) (10 2.9), - Cumulative 108.6 risk of valve-related morbidity
or mortality (30.6 mortality78 morbidity) over
30 years. - Chan V, Jamieson WRE, Germann E, Chan F,
Miyagishima RT, Burr LH, Janusz MT, Ling H,
Fradet GJ. Performance of bioprostheses and
mechanical prostheses assessed by composite of
valve-related complications to 15 years after
aortic valve replacement. J Thorac Cardiovasc
Surg. 2006131 12671273. - Roques F, Michel P, Gladstone AR, Nashef SAM. The
logistic EuroSCORE. Eur Heart J. 20032412.
65Bioprosthesis valve replacement
- At least 1 anticipated reoperation before 80
years of age. If reoperation occurs at 65 years
of age (15 years after initial surgery),
operative risk is 5.8,assuming that surgery is
done electively. - The anticipated risk of valve-related mortality
after bioprosthetic valve replacement is - 0.6/y for a patient 51 to 60 years of age,
- 1.0/y for a patient 61 to 70 years of age,
- 1.3/y for a patient 71 years of age,
- yielding a cumulative risk of valve-related
mortality of 29 over 30 years (10 0.6)(10
1.0)(10 1.3), similar to that after mechanical
valve replacement. - Valve-related morbidity
- 0.3/y for a patient 51 to 60 years of age,
- 0.4/y for a patient 61 to 70 years of age,
- 0.5/y for a patient age 71 years of age,
- yielding a cumulative risk of valve-related
morbidity of 12 over 30 years(10 0.3)(10 0.4)
(10 0.5) - Cumulative 48.3 risk of valve-related morbidity
or mortality 36.3 mortality12 morbidity over
30 years. - Even if the patient required a second
reoperation, the cumulative risk increases by
only 10.8 (calculated at 75 years of age). - Chan V, Jamieson WRE, Germann E, Chan F,
Miyagishima RT, Burr LH, Janusz MT, Ling H,
Fradet GJ. Performance of bioprostheses and
mechanical prostheses assessed by composite of
valve-related complications to 15 years after
aortic valve replacement. J Thorac Cardiovasc
Surg. 2006131 12671273.
66Projected Future Risks After Aortic Valve
Replacement in a 50-Year-Old Man, Assuming
30-Year Survival Mechanical Valve
Bioprosthetic Valve Replacement,
Replacement, Operative mortality 1.5
1.5 Death at reoperation (risk of
reoperationrisk of 2.1 5.8 death at
reoperation) (10.8 for second
reoperation) Valve-related
mortality (cumulative for 30 y) 27
29 Valve-related morbidity (cumulative for 30
y) 78 12 Total risk of morbidity
and 108.6 48.3 mortality over 30 y (59.1
if 2 reoperations)
67 Durable valve repair possible
Yes
No
Physician assessment
Life expectancy lt15 yr co morbidity
Life expectancy gt30 yr No co morbidity
Life expectancy 15-30 yr No co morbidity
Accept risk of reoperation No coagulation
Minimal life style change
No reoperation Will take anticoagulation
Accept life style change
Patient preference
Valve repair
Mechanical valve
Tissue valve
68- If the patients characteristics do not sway the
balance in favor of any particular valve
substitute, - The surgeon should use the valve most familiar to
him. - No one should test the depth of a river with
both feet. - Lawrence Bonchek, M.D
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