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2891 Surgery for Aortic Stenosis in Elderly Patients A Study of Surgical Risk and Predictive Factors Y. Logeais, MD; T. Langanay, MD; R. Roussin, MD; A. Leguerrier, MD; C. Rioux, MD; J. Chaperon, MD; C. de Place, MD; P. Mabo, MD; J.C. Pony, MD; J.C. Daubert, MD; M. Laurent, MD; C. Almange, MD Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 Background Aortic stenosis is the most common valvular lesion occurring among elderly patients and has become extremely frequent because of changing demographics in industrialized countries. Surgical risk after the age of 70 has increased. The increasing older age of patients having surgery justifies an analysis of mortality predictive factors. Methods and Results Between 1976 and February 1993, we performed 2871 operations for aortic stenosis. This study concerns 675 patients (278 men and 397 women) who were 275 years old. Mean age was 78.5 +3 years. Associated lesions were found in 226 patients. A bioprosthesis was implanted in 632 patients (93.6%). Concomitant surgical procedures were performed in 133 patients. Surgical mortality was 12.4% (84 deaths). A longitudinal analysis has been carried out over four successive time periods to evaluate population evolution dur- ing these 17 years. Statistical analysis was performed on 46 variables. Multivariate analysis found age (P<.0001), left ventricular failure (P<.0001), lack of sinus rhythm (P<.01), and emergency status (P<.02) to be presurgical independent predictive factors of mortality. Conclusions Risk-reducing strategy should both favor relatively early surgery to avoid cardiac failure and emergency situations and pay careful attention to the use of myocardial protection and cardiopulmonary bypass. Indications for surgery should remain broad since analysis failed to determine specific high-risk groups to be eliminated, and surgery remains the only treatment for aortic stenosis. (Circulation. 1994;90: C hanging demographics in industrialized coun- and analyzed by various programs. Multivariate analysis was carried out with BMDP Statistical Software (BMDP Corp). Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) was achieved using hemodilution (hematocrit from 22% to 27%) and moderate hypothermia (nasopharyngeal temperature at 28°C). Cold crystalloid cardioplegia with single or multiple doses was carried out with Bretschneider's solution. Cardioplegic solution was generally administered via aortic access. Bioprostheses were implanted in 93.6% of the patients (n=632). Surgical mortality was defined as deaths occurring during the first 30 postsurgical days or during hospitalization. tries and the increasing incidence of aortic stenosis (AS) in higher age groups'-3 are transforming this cardiopathy into an extremely frequent lesion. Because it is generally recognized that surgical risk increases with age,4-10 we analyzed our experience to identify risk factors and select new criteria for better indications and decreased risk. Methods All patients more than 75 years old who underwent surgery for AS in our unit between August 1976, when this type of surgery was begun in such elderly patients, and February 1993 were included in this study. There were no exclusion criteria (concomitant diseases or surgical procedures). Among a total of 2871 patients operated on for AS during this period, 675 (age range, 75 to 92 years) were included in this report, representing 23.5% of all operations. The 675 patients had been prospectively entered into a computerized data base containing demographic data, functional class, associated diseases, hemodynamics, radiological and echographic studies, and surgical and postsurgical data. Data entered into Hewlett Packard 250 and then 260 and 9000 computers were extracted by QUERY HP language, transferred, Received March 8, 1994; revision accepted July 27, 1994. From the Clinic for Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery (Y.L., T.L., R.R., A.L., C.R.), Public Health Laboratory (J.C.), Division of Cardiology A (C. de P., P.M., J.C.P., J.C.D.) and B (M.L., C.A.), University Hospital Center, Rennes, France. Correspondence to Yves Logeais, MD, Clinic for Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, H6pital Pontchaillou, Rue Henri Le Guillou, 35000 Rennes, France. © 1994 American Heart Association, Inc. 2891-2898.) Key Words * aortic stenosis * valves * elderly mortality Statistical Analysis Continuous data are expressed as mean+SD and compared using Student's t test and ANOVA. Qualitative variables are expressed as a percentage and compared by x2 test and Fisher's exact test. All variables - before, during, and after surgery -were first tested individually by univariate analysis. For continuous variables, critical threshold was determined by varying threshold values. To evaluate independent factors of predictive mortality, 30 variables considered as significant by univariate analysis were submitted to multivariate analysis and entered in a step-by-step logistic regression analysis. A variable was evaluated as a significant independent factor when the P value associated with X 2 improvement was <.05. Logistic regression analysis concerned only preoperative variables. In a second step, all preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative data were studied, retaining only preoperative factors previously determined as significant and after proceeding to quantitative criteria refining. Preoperative Characteristics Clinical preoperative data are listed in Table 1. Mean age was 78.5 +±2.97 years, and female sex was predominant 2892 Circulation Vol 90, No 6 December 1994 TABLE 2. Preoperative Investigations TABLE 1. Preoperative Clinical Data No. of patients, % Age, y 675 (100) 78.5±2.97 (range, 75 to 92) 278 (41.2) 397 (58.8) 200 (29.6) 18 (2.7) Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 Male, n (%) Female, n (%) Systemic arterial hypertension, n (%) Diabetes, n (%) Associated diseases, n (%) 311 Total 226 (33.5) No. of patients 75 (11.1) Associated Al, n (%) 32 (4.7) Associated mitral or tricuspid lesion, n (%) 52 (7.7) Previous myocardial infarction, n (%) NYHA class, mean±SD 2.82±0.67 38.4±51.7 Mean length of symptom, mo 605 (89.6) Dyspnea, n (%) 334 (49.5) Angina, n (%) 151 (22.4) Syncope, n (%) 354 (52.4) LV failure, n (%) 68 (10.1) RV failure, n (%) 54 (8.0) Emergency surgery, n (%) Previous surgical history, n 1 Coronary 1 Valvular Al indicates aortic insufficiency; NYHA, New York Heart Association; LV, left ventricular; and RV, right ventricular. (58.8%). Systemic arterial hypertension was found in 200 cases (29.6%), and associated diseases were found in 226 cases (33.5%). Some patients had associated aortic insufficiency (AI) (75 patients) or mitral or tricuspid anomaly (32 patients). Dyspnea was the most frequent symptom (86.6%). Many patients had left ventricular failure (LVF) (52.4%) or right ventricular failure (RVF) (10.1%). Fifty patients (8.0%) underwent surgery on an emergency basis. The results of the investigations are listed in Table 2. Echocardiographic data confirmed severe stenosis, with a mean orifice area of 0.6 cm2. Coronary arteriography was carried out in 348 patients (51.6%), revealing significant coronary lesions in 31.3% (109 patients). Surgical Data Surgical data are listed in Tables 3 and 4. Mechanical prostheses (43 patients, 6.4%) were implanted in particular reasons: repeated operation for altered bioprosthesis (one case) or small aortic annulus associated with calcified aortic root. Among concomitant surgical procedures, the most frequent were coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) (79 patients), myotomy for subaortic septal hypertrophy (31 patients), and various procedures on the ascending aorta (30 patients). Table 4 describes myocardial protection techniques, CPB, and aortic cross-clamp duration as well as hemodynamic recovery at the end of CPB. 54.3±6.23 (range, 42 to 73) 441 (65.3) Cardiothoracic ratio ECG sinus rhythm, n (%) Conduction disturbances (AVB, LBB, RBB), n (%) 313 (46.4) Echocardiography LV ejection fraction, % 54.25±15.3 70.45±16.9 Maximum gradient, mm Hg 33.4±18.7 Mean gradient, mm Hg Aortic area, cm2 0.6±1.7 Angiography LV ejection fraction, % 58.3±17.3 348 (51.6) Coronary arteriography performed, n (%) 109 (31.3) Significant lesions, n (%) AVB indicates atrioventricular block; LBB, left bundle-branch block; RBB, right bundle-branch block; and LV, left ventricular. Results Overall surgical mortality was 12.4% (84 patients). Causes of death are listed in Table 5. In most instances, TABLE 3. Surgical Data (1) Mechanical prostheses, n (%) Bjork-Shiley 43 (6.4) 17 21 5 632 (93.6) 460 149 4 19 133 (19.7) St Jude Medical Carbomedics Bioprostheses, n (%) Carpentier-Edwards Medtronic Intact Biocor lonescu-Shiley Concomitant surgery, n (%) Coronary bypass (1=47, 2=24, 79 3=7; endarterectomy 1) LV myotomy 31 MVR 12 4 MVR+tricuspid annuloplasty MVR+CABG 1 MVR+tricuspid 1 annuloplasty+CABG LA thrombectomy 1 Carotid endarterectomy 4 Ascending aorta surgery, n (%) 30 (4.4) Reduction 6 Tube 5 Bentall 2 17 Endarterectomy LV indicates left ventricular; MVR, mitral valve replacement; LA, left atrial; and CABG, coronary artery bypass graft (surgery). Logeais et al Surgical Risk of AS in the Elderly TABLE 4. Surgical Data (2) Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 Myocardial protection, n (%) 506 (75.0) Cold crystalloid cardioplegia via aortic access 132 (19.6) Aortic cardioplegia+ice slush 29 (4.3) Cardioplegia via coronary sinus 6 (0.9) Cardioplegia via coronary arteries 133 (19.7) Reperfusions (1 to 3) 73±55 CPB duration, mean min 50.6±30 Aortic cross-clamp, mean min Defibrillation, n (%) 231 (34.2) Spontaneous 352 (52.1) One shock 87 (12.9) Several shocks Hemodynamic recovery, n (%) 583 (86.4) Excellent 92 (13.6) Average or poor 135 (20.0) Stimulation for temporary AV block Circulatory support 27 (4.0) Sustained CPB 3 (0.4) IABCP CPB indicates cardiopulmonary bypass; AV, atrioventricular; and IABCP, intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation. permission for autopsy was not obtained. Myocardial causes were predominant (43 deaths, 51%), including low cardiac output (29 patients), myocardial infarction (8 patients), and ventricular dysrhythmias (6 patients). TABLE 5. Surgical Mortality for 84 of 675 Patients (12.4%) Cause of Death Myocardial Low cardiac output Myocardial infarction Ventricular dysrhythmias Tamponade Valve related lonescu-Shiley thrombosis Cerebral embolism Infection Cerebrovascular stroke Respiratory insufficiency Renal insufficiency Digestive and abdominal complications Coagulation disorders Surgical technique Intensive care failure Total No. of Patients 43 29 8 6 4 3 2 1 2 5 5 3 11 2 4 2 84 % 51 5 4 2 6 6 4 13 2 5 2 100 2893 Gastrointestinal complications were the second leading cause of death (11 deaths, 13%), mostly mesenteric infarction. Effect of Year of Surgery on Presurgical and Surgical Characteristics The population (Table 6) was divided into four groups over the study period, and the number of patients operated on increased significantly over the years. Apart from the 1976 through 1980 period, which is nonsignificant because of the small number of patients (10 patients and 0 deaths), there was no significant variation in surgical mortality. Preoperative data showed two opposite trends in relation to surgical risk. One was a relative improvement in cardiac status: New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class, LVF and RVF, cardiothoracic ratio, and associated Al. The second was a regular increase in age (mean from 76.4 to 79 years, P<10`7) and in incidence of associated diseases represented by the percentage of patients and penetration index (ratio of number of diseases to number of patients). Left ventricular catheterization, coronary arteriography, and femoral retrograde route were not considered to be risk-free factors in these elderly patients. During the first years of this series, invasive investigations were performed selectively in patients showing clinical signs of coronary insufficiency. Since 1990, the routine use of coronary arteriography was adopted regardless of patient age. A total of 348 patients were studied; 239 (68.7%) presented with either normal arteries (165) or insignificant lesions (74). Among 109 patients (31.3%) with significant lesions (50% stenosis of the main trunk or 70% stenosis of the branches), CABG was performed in 79 patients (72.5%) and appeared to be impossible in 30 patients (27.5%) because of vessel thrombosis or poor run-off. An increasing incidence in overall concomitant surgery was also observed. CPB and aortic cross-clamp times decreased, whereas postoperative bleeding increased. Factors Determining Surgical Mortality The variables found to be significant by univariate or multivariate analysis are given in Table 7. Age was extremely significant compared with 2196 patients with AS who were <75 years old and were operated on during the same period (145 of 2196 deaths, 6.6%; P<.0001). In our overall series of 2871 cases, surgical mortality varied from 2.2% to 12.4% depending on the age group (Fig 2). However, among the 675 elderly patients, mortality did not increase after age 80. Multivariate analysis also confirmed the role of LVF (P<.0001); atrial fibrillation (P<.01), usually indicating a long history and poor tolerance; and the need for emergency surgery (P<.02). NYHA functional grade, cardiomegaly, associated Al, RVF, and tricuspid insufficiency, which were found to be significant by univariate analysis, were not confirmed by multivariate analysis. The same result was obtained for four intraoperative variables found to be significant by univariate analysis: hemodynamic recovery at the end of CPB, associated tricuspid annulo- 2894 Circulation Vol 90, No 6 December 1994 TABLE 6. Demographic Data for 1976 Through 1993 No. of cases Death, % Age, mean y Associated diseases, % Associated diseases, n/No. of patients NYHA, mean LVfailure, % CT ratio, mean Associated Al Coronary arteriography, % Significant coronary lesions, % CPB, min Aortic cross-clamp, min 1980 10 0 76.4 30 1985 84 11.9 77 22.6 1990 245 13.9 78.5 39.2 1993 336 12 79 32.1 P ... NS 10-7 .05 Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 0.50 0.47 .05 2.8 2.8 .001 46 49 10-9 53.8 54.4 10-4 9.8 9 10-6 32 79 10-9 ... 33.3 30.6 NS 67 75 105 10-7 69 46 53 10-6 0 7.4 18 10-4 CABG,% 11 0 20 27 .001 Associated surgery (overall), % 1.2 8.6 2.7 0 .002 LV myectomy 1.2 1.2 1.13 1.15 .01 Hemodynamic recovery, 1 to 4 ... 527 mL 690 780 10-7 24 Bleeding h, LV indicates left ventricular; RV, right ventricular; NYHA, New York Heart Association; Al, aortic insufficiency; CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; and CABG, coronary artery bypass graft surgery. During the time frame, the following variables were found to be nonsignificantly different: surgical -RV failure, cardiac rhythm, previous myocardial infarction, mitral insufficiency, tricuspid insufficiency, LV ejection fraction, and emergency; during surgery-mitral valve replacement; tricuspid annuloplasty, and ascending aorta surgery; and after surgery-low cardiac output, myocardial infarction, repeated operation for tamponade, sustained respiratory support, and renal failure. 0.30 3.2 100 56.5 60 ... plasty, mitral valve replacement, or overall associated surgery. Inversely, all of the postoperative variables-except for renal failure -were confirmed by multivariate analysis: low cardiac output, sustained respiratory support, myocardial infarction, and repeated operation for tamponade. Discussion The rewarding results of cardiac surgery on elderly patients over the past years has been responsible for the increasing development of geriatric cardiac surgery.11-14 We also experienced such changes (Fig 1) in our series of patients with AS, which was one of the largest reported.15-22 There is no reason to question the decision to perform surgery in more elderly patients, since medical treatment remains largely ineffective when AS becomes symptomatic23 and balloon dilatation does not provide successful results and cannot be retained as a truly competitive alternative. The result is that valve replacement is recognized as the sole curative treatment.3 In some instances, the success of surgery has led to a discussion of prophylactic indications in symptomfree or mildly symptomatic patients who are candidates for another type of surgery (hip arthroplasty, etc). In accepting this change, we should ask whether there is a relative shift in indications. Are "lesser cardiac and 0.27 2.8 80 56.8 18 5 25 80 53 0 older patients" operated on? If observed, such a shift in indications would not only reduce the duration and quality of surgical results but also increase the already high economic cost and result in an ethical discussion that is topical. Surgical technique brought to its extreme would reach its limit through a progressive decrease in its benefit. We carried out this study to evaluate severity factors and avoid, if possible, high-risk patients to retain the best indications that would guarantee good results and tolerable risk. Statistical analysis has confirmed a heavy incidence of age.24-30 In our overall experience of 2871 patients with AS of all ages who were operated on during the same period (Fig 2), risk was low (from 2.2% to 2.9%) at less than age 60, increased between age 60 and 70 (6.2%), and eventually leveled off after age 70 (11.2%). The studied series of 675 elderly patients with AS did not reveal any significant increase between age 75 and 90. A near-equal risk situation was reached after age 70. Left ventricular dysfunction, functional class, emergency surgery, aortic regurgitation, and cardiomegaly were also found to be predictive risk factors. The logistic regression curve (Fig 3) displays the role of these factors when held concurrently. Risk reaches 40% when the five factors are combined. Lack of sinus rhythm is also considered as generally referring to an advanced Logeais et al Surgical Risk of AS in the Elderly TABLE 7. Surgical Risk Factors Univarlate P< Multivarlate P< X2 Im- provement Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 Preoperative variables Age >80y NS NS ... <75 y .001 10-4 53.2 NYHA class .03 NS ... LV failure .0001 10-4 15.9 RV failure .01 NS ... CT ratio .002 NS ... ECG rhythm .0005 .01 6.6 EF (echocardiography) .03 NS ... Associated Al .005 ... NS TI .02 NS ... Emergency .002 .02 5.3 Operating surgeon .0005 NS ... lntraoperative variables Hemodynamic recovery 10-5 NS ... Tricuspid annuloplasty .009 NS ... MVR .02 NS ... Associated surgery (overall) .05 ... NS Postoperative variables Low cardiac output 1 o-8 10-4 69 Sustained respiratory support 1 Q-8 10-4 30 10-6 Myocardial infarction .001 10.7 Reoperation for tamponade .001 .02 5.2 Renal failure 10-4 NS ... NYHA indicates New York Heart Association; LV, left ventricular; RV, right ventricular; CT, cardiothoracic; EF, ejection fraction; Al, aortic insufficiency; TI, tricuspid insufficiency; and MVR, mitral valve replacement. 2895 state of the disease. Less significant are right-side heart failure and tricuspid insufficiency, although they are orientation factors. The surgeon is also a perceptible factor in univariate analysis, but this would lead to a discussion of series homogeneity. The presence of coronary artery lesions with or without revascularization was not found to be a determining factor. First, surgical mortality in the group with coronary arteriography (41 of 348, 11.8±1.7%) was not significantly different from that of the group without (43 of 327, 13.1±1.9%). Likewise, the difference was not significantly affected by the presence (17 of 109, 15.6±3.5%) or absence (24 of 239, 10±1.9%) of coronary lesions. When significant coronary lesions were present, surgical mortality was higher (14 of 79, 17.7±4.3%) in patients who had associated coronary bypass grafts than in those who did not, because of poor run-off (3 of 30, 10±5.5%). Again, the difference was not statistically significant. An analysis of other intraoperative variables revealed that concomitant procedures had little or no effect; this was confirmed by the lack of a role for aortic crossclamp duration during CPB between the limits of 110 and 65 minutes. It is interesting to note that the date of surgery over the entire 17-year period did not influence surgical risk. Age increase as well as associated disease may have counterbalanced the progress achieved in surgical technique and postoperative care. As mentioned, postoperative variables represent a recognition of poor prognosis more than they are truly predictive factors. They, however, underline the role of myocardial protection and surgical hemostasis since repeated surgery for tamponade is an important risk factor, and many have observed increased postoperative bleeding that is attributed to coagulation defect. An analysis confirmed the severity of advanced cases with left- and right-side heart failure, although left ventricular dysfunction is not always considered a determining factor of surgical mortality,12'14'28 whereas it is generally accepted as a predictor of long-term outcome. Accordingly, left ventricular dysfunction should not be considered a contraindication to surgery. In searching for the best surgical indications, we thought it would be interesting to retrospectively ana- 100 FIG 1. Bar graph of yearly incidence. The number of patients 75 years and older who were operated on per year for aortic stenosis has been increasing since 1976. 60 40 0 197 1980 1985 1990 1993 FEB 2896 Circulation Vol 90, No 6 December 1994 14 T 12,4 12 4 10 4 11,2 FIG 2. Bar graph of surgical risk analysis according to age (mortality in percent). Studied group (75 years or older, mortality 12.4%) is compared with other age groups who were operated on during the same period (1976 through February 1993). Overall mortality of 2871 cases series was 7.97% (229 deaths). Before 70 years, surgical mortality was 4.9% (80 of 1614) (P<.0001). 8- 62 6- 4. 28 2- 0- -I )60 50 40 75 70 90 Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 lyze how much removing high-risk cases, as indicated by the univariate analysis, would have contributed to improved results. Fig 4 shows that the elimination of emergency surgery, aortic regurgitation, NYTHA class IV, and concomitant surgical procedures did not provide a statistically significant decrease in risk. Improvement was obtained only by discarding a larger number of cases with cumulative suppression of the abovementioned groups. Reducing the number of patients from 675 to 420 would have lowered the risk to 8.3%. An additional improvement can be accomplished by the cumulative elimination of patients with coronary artery lesions, cardiomegaly, and left ventricular insufficiency. The final group has a low risk of 3.2%, obtained only by this severe and unrealistic selection (154 of the initial 675 cases). As a consequence, based on our analysis there would be no easy way to improve results, either by searching for severity factors or by eliminating high-risk cases. An analysis of the causes of death (Table 5) revealed two important groups. The group with myocardial causes had 43 deaths (51%) from low cardiac output, myocardial infarction, and ventricular dysrythmias. This underlines the role of myocardial protection. One could also question the role of mechanical support in the treatment of myocardial complications. We did not 00% consider it desirable to cross this limit due to the investment required and because we wanted to keep the treatment within "reasonable" limits. Gastrointestinal complications, including mesenteric infarction (11 deaths, 13%), formed a second significant group of causes of death. The effect of associated low cardiac output and inotropic drugs must not be overlooked as they may aggravate mesenteric ischemia. Standard CPB at 28°C is questionable because hypothermia can reduce blood flow in the mesenteric area. A routine policy of hypothermia deserves to be challenged in favor of normothermia under the condition of adequate arterial pressure during CPB. The study of other causes of death underlines the importance of patient preparation (respiratory training) and rigorous surgical technique. Aortic annulus decalcification must be performed with great care because even repaired annulus wounds may provoke myocardial hemorrhagic dissection and hematomas, which are always poorly tolerated. Conclusions This series of elderly patients with AS, which is one of the largest reported, confirms that surgical risk is increased after age 70, which is in agreement with most series reporting a risk of > 10%.3,17,20 Probability of death 90 80 70 60 50 40 --- 30 20 . 10 0: Emergency Al CTR LVF NYHA . . . . . . . . 01 0 1 O0 1 0 1 2 1 12 1 1 0 0 1 11 0 0 3 3 4 24 2 4 . , . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 001 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 001 1 1 1 2 0 0 2 3 2 0 0 0- 1 2 1 1 3 4 1 221 2 1 111 1 3 234 3 , 10 0 0 1 1 12 1 11 1 4 4 3 l 100 101 222 100 443 1 0 2 1 3 FIG 3. Logistic regression analysis of preoperative mortality factors (in percent). Vertical lecture indicates the risk of each group. Additive effect is observed on the curve (number of patients becomes too low to validate the curve above a 25% risk) (emergency: 0, no; 1, yes; Al: associated aortic insufficiency: 0, absent; 1, present; LVF: left ventricular failure: 0, absent; 1, present; NYHA: New York Heart Association: functional class; CTR: cardiothoracic ratio, 0, below 0.6; 1, above 0.6. Logeais et al Surgical Risk of AS in the Elderly 700 675 600- 500 600 ,, 61 529 - 400- T E T M A L R 05 AII G E N C Y 300- 200 100- 1 1 ASS I H SURG A I 0 N 1AX1 2 3- 2 3 .15 A ALL Iv 4 10,7 . .01 23 CO LES 4 154 10,9 6 -4- .001 emR > 0.59 5 6. 7+ 8 5 6 7 9 Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 An analysis of risk factors proved that left ventricular dysfunction, lack of sinus rhythm, and emergency surgery are independent predictive factors of surgical mortality. However, there is no easy way to discern low-risk subgroups. Therefore, surgical indications must remain broad. Respiratory preparation, myocardial protection, and probably normothermic CPB are methods of improving prognosis as valvular replacement remains the only curative treatment for AS. 4. 5. 6. 7. Appendix: Variables Entered Into the Analyses Before Surgery 8. Variables were sex, age (>80 or <75 years), NYHA class, LVF, RVF, cardiothoracic ratio, associated diseases, cardiac rhythm, left ventricular ejection fraction (angiography, echocardiography), coronary arteriography, coronary artery lesions, associated valve malfunctions (aortic insufficiency, mitral insufficiency, tricuspid insufficiency), duration of symptoms, angina, dyspnea, syncope, conduction disturbances (atrioventricular block, left bundle-branch block, right bundle-branch block), previous myocardial infarction, emergency surgery, preoperative intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation, and year of surgery. 9. 10. 11. 12. During Surgery Variables were duration of CPB and aortic cross-clamping, type of prosthesis, associated surgery (mitral valve replacement, tricuspid annuloplasty, CABG, ascending aorta, septal myectomy, and overall associated surgery), hemodynamic recovery after CPB, ABCP, and surgeon. 13. 14. After Surgery 15. Variables were atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, conduction disturbances, low cardiac output, myocardial infarction, repeated operation (tamponade or hemorrhage), pacemaker insertion, blood loss, sustained respiratory support, intestinal hemorrhage, abdominal complications, and renal failure. 16. References 17. 1. Passik CS, Ackerman DG, Pluth JR, Edwards WD. Temporal changes in the causes of aortic stenosis: a surgical pathologic study of 646 cases. Mayo Clin Proc. 1987;62:119-123. 2. Normand J, Loire R, Zambartas C. The anatomical aspects of adult aortic stenosis. Eur Heart J. 1988;9(suppl E):31-36. 3. Logeais Y, Leguerrier A, Rioux C, Delambre JF, Langanay T, Vidal V, Potier JJ, Scordia P, Ollitrault J, El Issa A, Orhant P, Sevray B, Coeurdacier P, Lucas A, Goldmine M, Renaud B, Staerman F. Retrecissement aortique du sujet ag6: resultat du 18. | LVF 3,2 2897 FIG 4. Bar graph of search for "ideal case." Surgical mortality improvement is obtained by suppressing risk factors found by statistical analysis. Suppression of emergency, aortic regurgitation, New York Heart Association (NYHA) class IV, and concomitant surgery (ASS SURG) (columns 2 to 5) does not significantly reduce the risk. Cumulative suppression of these factors (column 6) reduces the risk to 8.3% (P<.05). A more important decrease is obtained by cumulative eviction of coronary lesions (COR. LES.) (8%), cardiothoracic ratio (CTR) above 0.59 (6%), and left ventricular dysfunction (LVF) (risk, 3.2%) (columns 7 to 9). 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Y Logeais, T Langanay, R Roussin, A Leguerrier, C Rioux, J Chaperon, C de Place, P Mabo, J C Pony and J C Daubert Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on June 11, 2017 Circulation. 1994;90:2891-2898 doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.90.6.2891 Circulation is published by the American Heart Association, 7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, TX 75231 Copyright © 1994 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. Print ISSN: 0009-7322. Online ISSN: 1524-4539 The online version of this article, along with updated information and services, is located on the World Wide Web at: http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/90/6/2891 Permissions: Requests for permissions to reproduce figures, tables, or portions of articles originally published in Circulation can be obtained via RightsLink, a service of the Copyright Clearance Center, not the Editorial Office. 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