Conference Coverage

Concomitant MIMV-TVS no worse than MIMV alone


 

AT THE 2017 MITRAL VALVE CONCLAVE

– Concurrent mitral-tricuspid valve surgery has similar outcomes to isolated minimally invasive mitral valve surgery, according to results of a 12-year review reported at the 2017 Mitral Valve Conclave, sponsored by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery.

Indications for minimally invasive tricuspid valve surgery done at the same time of mitral valve surgery have not been well established, in part because the outcomes of such combined procedures have been underreported.

Dr. Arman Kilic of the university of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

Dr. Arman Kilic

“Despite longer operative times, minimally invasive tricuspid valve surgery (TVS) performed concomitantly with mitral valve surgery has similar outcomes when compared to isolated mitral valve surgery,” said Arman Kilic, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. The single-center study he reported on reviewed 1,158 patients who had minimally invasive mitral valve (MIMV) surgery from 2002 to 2014, including 148 who had concomitant MIMV and tricuspid valve surgery (TVS). All operations involved port access minithoracotomy. Propensity-matched analysis involved 119 in each the isolated MIMV surgery group and the MIMV-TVS group.

Dr. Kilic noted that patients who had concomitant TVS were typically higher risk at baseline. “The concomitant group was older, had a higher percentage of female patients, and higher rates of chronic lung disease and cerebrovascular disease as well,” Dr. Kilic said. In comparing the isolated MIMV surgery and MIMV-TVS groups in the unmatched analysis, 9% vs. 14% had chronic lung disease (P = .05), 12% vs. 16% had coronary artery disease (P = .15), 7% vs. 12% had cerebrovascular disease (P = .04), and 93% vs. 90% had elective surgery (P = .18). The majority of tricuspid repairs were for severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR) or moderate TR with a dilated annulus of 40 mm or greater.

The operative characteristics differed significantly between the two groups. “As one might expect, the cardiopulmonary bypass time and aortic occlusion times were longer in the concomitant group; and balloon aortic occlusion was used in more than 70% in each cohort,” Dr. Kilic said. Those differences were similar in the propensity-matched cohort: bypass times were 147.5 minutes for isolated MIMV surgery and 174.6 minutes for MIMV-TVS (P less than .001); and aortic occlusion time 104.8 vs. 128 minutes (P less than .001), respectively.

Operative mortality was 3% for isolated MIMV surgery and 4% for concurrent MIMV-TVS (P = .73), but the isolated MIMV surgery group required fewer permanent pacemakers, 1% vs. 6% (P = .03).

“Aside from permanent pacemaker implantation, the rates of every other complication were similar, including stoke, limb ischemia, atrial fibrillation, gastrointestinal complications, respiratory complications, blood product transfusions as well as discharge to home rates,” Dr. Kilic said. Median hospital length of stays were also similar: 7 days for isolated MIMV surgery vs. 8 days for MIMV-TVS (P = .13).

One limitation of the study Dr. Kilic pointed out was that the decision to perform concomitant MIMV-TVS was surgeon dependent.

Dr. Kilic reported having no financial disclosures.

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