One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial

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Standard

One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial. / Serruys, Patrick W; Modolo, Rodrigo; Reardon, Michael; Miyazaki, Yosuke; Windecker, Stephan; Popma, Jeffrey; Chang, Yanping; Kleiman, Neal S; Lilly, Scott; Amrane, Hafid; Boonstra, Piet W; Kappetein, Arie Pieter; Onuma, Yoshinobu; Søndergaard, Lars; van Mieghem, Nicolas.

I: EuroIntervention, Bind 14, Nr. 8, 2018, s. 877-883.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Serruys, PW, Modolo, R, Reardon, M, Miyazaki, Y, Windecker, S, Popma, J, Chang, Y, Kleiman, NS, Lilly, S, Amrane, H, Boonstra, PW, Kappetein, AP, Onuma, Y, Søndergaard, L & van Mieghem, N 2018, 'One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial', EuroIntervention, bind 14, nr. 8, s. 877-883. https://doi.org/10.4244/EIJ-D-18-00460

APA

Serruys, P. W., Modolo, R., Reardon, M., Miyazaki, Y., Windecker, S., Popma, J., Chang, Y., Kleiman, N. S., Lilly, S., Amrane, H., Boonstra, P. W., Kappetein, A. P., Onuma, Y., Søndergaard, L., & van Mieghem, N. (2018). One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial. EuroIntervention, 14(8), 877-883. https://doi.org/10.4244/EIJ-D-18-00460

Vancouver

Serruys PW, Modolo R, Reardon M, Miyazaki Y, Windecker S, Popma J o.a. One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial. EuroIntervention. 2018;14(8):877-883. https://doi.org/10.4244/EIJ-D-18-00460

Author

Serruys, Patrick W ; Modolo, Rodrigo ; Reardon, Michael ; Miyazaki, Yosuke ; Windecker, Stephan ; Popma, Jeffrey ; Chang, Yanping ; Kleiman, Neal S ; Lilly, Scott ; Amrane, Hafid ; Boonstra, Piet W ; Kappetein, Arie Pieter ; Onuma, Yoshinobu ; Søndergaard, Lars ; van Mieghem, Nicolas. / One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial. I: EuroIntervention. 2018 ; Bind 14, Nr. 8. s. 877-883.

Bibtex

@article{d3321acd392a4171b377f8a3ac4aee3e,
title = "One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial",
abstract = "AIMS: The indication for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has evolved from inoperable patients to patients at increased surgical risk. In low-risk patients, surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) remains the standard of care. The aim of this study was to explore the outcomes of TAVI and SAVR in patients with a Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) predicted risk of mortality (PROM) score below 3% in the SURTAVI trial.METHODS AND RESULTS: In SURTAVI, patients at intermediate surgical risk based on Heart Team consensus were randomised to TAVI or SAVR. We stratified the overall patient population into quintiles based on the STS PROM score; the one-year mortality was correlated with the mean STS PROM score in each quintile. The quintiles were regrouped into three clinically relevant categories of STS score: less than 3%, 3 to <5%, and >5%. All-cause mortality or disabling stroke in each risk stratum was compared between TAVI and SAVR. Linear regressions between mean values of STS PROM in each quintile and observed all-cause mortality at one year showed great association for the global population (r2=0.92), TAVI (r2=0.89) and SAVR cohorts (r2=0.73). All-cause mortality or disabling stroke of TAVI vs. SAVR was 1.5% vs. 6.5% (p=0.04), 6.5% vs. 7.6% (p=0.52) and 13.5% vs. 11.0% (p=0.40) in the <3%, 3-5%, and ≥5% STS score strata, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: Among patients at intermediate surgical risk but with an STS PROM <3%, TAVI may achieve superior clinical outcomes compared to SAVR. These findings support the need for an adequately powered randomised trial to compare TAVI with SAVR in patients at low operative risk.",
author = "Serruys, {Patrick W} and Rodrigo Modolo and Michael Reardon and Yosuke Miyazaki and Stephan Windecker and Jeffrey Popma and Yanping Chang and Kleiman, {Neal S} and Scott Lilly and Hafid Amrane and Boonstra, {Piet W} and Kappetein, {Arie Pieter} and Yoshinobu Onuma and Lars S{\o}ndergaard and {van Mieghem}, Nicolas",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.4244/EIJ-D-18-00460",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "877--883",
journal = "EuroIntervention",
issn = "1774-024X",
publisher = "Europa Digital & Publishing",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - One-year outcomes of patients with severe aortic stenosis and an STS PROM of less than three percent in the SURTAVI trial

AU - Serruys, Patrick W

AU - Modolo, Rodrigo

AU - Reardon, Michael

AU - Miyazaki, Yosuke

AU - Windecker, Stephan

AU - Popma, Jeffrey

AU - Chang, Yanping

AU - Kleiman, Neal S

AU - Lilly, Scott

AU - Amrane, Hafid

AU - Boonstra, Piet W

AU - Kappetein, Arie Pieter

AU - Onuma, Yoshinobu

AU - Søndergaard, Lars

AU - van Mieghem, Nicolas

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - AIMS: The indication for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has evolved from inoperable patients to patients at increased surgical risk. In low-risk patients, surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) remains the standard of care. The aim of this study was to explore the outcomes of TAVI and SAVR in patients with a Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) predicted risk of mortality (PROM) score below 3% in the SURTAVI trial.METHODS AND RESULTS: In SURTAVI, patients at intermediate surgical risk based on Heart Team consensus were randomised to TAVI or SAVR. We stratified the overall patient population into quintiles based on the STS PROM score; the one-year mortality was correlated with the mean STS PROM score in each quintile. The quintiles were regrouped into three clinically relevant categories of STS score: less than 3%, 3 to <5%, and >5%. All-cause mortality or disabling stroke in each risk stratum was compared between TAVI and SAVR. Linear regressions between mean values of STS PROM in each quintile and observed all-cause mortality at one year showed great association for the global population (r2=0.92), TAVI (r2=0.89) and SAVR cohorts (r2=0.73). All-cause mortality or disabling stroke of TAVI vs. SAVR was 1.5% vs. 6.5% (p=0.04), 6.5% vs. 7.6% (p=0.52) and 13.5% vs. 11.0% (p=0.40) in the <3%, 3-5%, and ≥5% STS score strata, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: Among patients at intermediate surgical risk but with an STS PROM <3%, TAVI may achieve superior clinical outcomes compared to SAVR. These findings support the need for an adequately powered randomised trial to compare TAVI with SAVR in patients at low operative risk.

AB - AIMS: The indication for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has evolved from inoperable patients to patients at increased surgical risk. In low-risk patients, surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) remains the standard of care. The aim of this study was to explore the outcomes of TAVI and SAVR in patients with a Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) predicted risk of mortality (PROM) score below 3% in the SURTAVI trial.METHODS AND RESULTS: In SURTAVI, patients at intermediate surgical risk based on Heart Team consensus were randomised to TAVI or SAVR. We stratified the overall patient population into quintiles based on the STS PROM score; the one-year mortality was correlated with the mean STS PROM score in each quintile. The quintiles were regrouped into three clinically relevant categories of STS score: less than 3%, 3 to <5%, and >5%. All-cause mortality or disabling stroke in each risk stratum was compared between TAVI and SAVR. Linear regressions between mean values of STS PROM in each quintile and observed all-cause mortality at one year showed great association for the global population (r2=0.92), TAVI (r2=0.89) and SAVR cohorts (r2=0.73). All-cause mortality or disabling stroke of TAVI vs. SAVR was 1.5% vs. 6.5% (p=0.04), 6.5% vs. 7.6% (p=0.52) and 13.5% vs. 11.0% (p=0.40) in the <3%, 3-5%, and ≥5% STS score strata, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: Among patients at intermediate surgical risk but with an STS PROM <3%, TAVI may achieve superior clinical outcomes compared to SAVR. These findings support the need for an adequately powered randomised trial to compare TAVI with SAVR in patients at low operative risk.

U2 - 10.4244/EIJ-D-18-00460

DO - 10.4244/EIJ-D-18-00460

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29992904

VL - 14

SP - 877

EP - 883

JO - EuroIntervention

JF - EuroIntervention

SN - 1774-024X

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 217697388