• Title of article

    Prosthesis-Patient Mismatch After Aortic Valve Replacement: Impact of Age and Body Size on Late Survival

  • Author/Authors

    Marc R. Moon، نويسنده , , Michael K. Pasque، نويسنده , , Nabil A. Munfakh، نويسنده , , Spencer J. Melby، نويسنده , , Jennifer S. Lawton، نويسنده , , Nader Moazami، نويسنده , , John E. Codd، نويسنده , , Traves D. Crabtree، نويسنده , , Hendrick B. Barner، نويسنده , , Ralph J. Damiano Jr، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    481
  • To page
    489
  • Abstract
    Background The purpose of this study was to identify patient subgroups in which prosthesis-patient mismatch most influenced late survival. Methods Over a 12-year period, 1,400 consecutive patients underwent bioprosthetic (933 patients) or mechanical (467) aortic valve replacement. Prosthesis-patient mismatch was defined as prosthetic effective orifice area/body surface area less than 0.75 cm2/m2 and was present with 11% mechanical and 51% bioprosthetic valves. Results With bioprosthetic valves, prosthesis-patient mismatch was associated with impaired survival for patients less than 60 years old (10-year: 68% ± 7% mismatch versus 75% ± 7% no mismatch, p< 0.02) but not older patients (p= 0.47). Similarly, with mechanical valves, prosthesis-patient mismatch was associated with impaired survival for patients less than 60 years old (10-year: 62% ± 11% versus 79% ± 4%, p< 0.005) but not older patients (p = 0.26). For small patients (body surface area less than 1.7 m2), prosthesis-patient mismatch did not impact survival with bioprosthetic (p = 0.32) or mechanical (p= 0.71) valves. For average-size patients (body surface area 1.7 to 2.1 m2), prosthesis-patient mismatch was associated with impaired survival with both bioprosthetic (p< 0.05) and mechanical (p< 0.005) valves. For large patients (body surface area greater than 2.1 m2), prosthesis-patient mismatch was associated with impaired survival with mechanical (p< 0.04) but not bioprosthetic (p= 0.40) valves. Conclusions Prosthesis-patient mismatch had a negative impact on survival for young patients, but its impact on older patients was minimal. In addition, although prosthesis-patient mismatch was not important in small patients, prosthesis-patient mismatch negatively impacted survival for average-size patients and for large patients with mechanical valves.
  • Journal title
    The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
  • Record number

    609371