Changes in operative strategy for patients enrolled in the International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection interventional cohort program.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-2017
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Advancements in cardiothoracic surgery prompted investigation into changes in operative management for acute type A aortic dissections over time.
METHODS: One thousand seven hundred thirty-two patients undergoing surgery for type A aortic dissection were identified from the International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection Interventional Cohort Database. Patients were divided into time tertiles (T) (T1: 1996-2003, T2: 2004-2010, and T3: 2011-2016).
RESULTS: Frequency of valve sparing procures increased (T1: 3.9%, T2: 18.6%, and T3: 26.7%; trend P < .001). Biologic valves were increasingly utilized (T1: 35.6%, T2; 40.6%, and T3: 52.0%; trend P = .009), whereas mechanical valve use decreased (T1: 57.6%, T2: 58.0%, and T3: 45.4%; trend P = .027) for aortic valve replacement. Adjunctive cerebral perfusion use increased (T1: 67.1%, T2: 89.5%, and T3: 84.8%; trend P < .001), with increase in antegrade cerebral techniques (T1: 55.9%, T2: 58.8%, and T3: 66.1%; trend P = .005) and hypothermic circulatory arrest (T1: 80.1%, T2: 85.9%, and T3: 86.8%; trend P = .030). Arterial perfusion through axillary cannulation increased (T1: 18.0%, T2: 33.2%, and T3: 55.7%), whereas perfusion via a femoral approach diminished (T1: 76.0%, T2: 53.3%, and T3: 30.1%) (both P values < .001). Hemiarch replacement was utilized more frequently (T1: 27.0%, T2: 63.3%, and T3: 51.7%; trend P = .001) and partial arch was utilized less frequently (T1: 20.7%, T2: 12.0%, and T3: 8.4%; trend P < .001), whereas complete arch replacement was used similarly (P = .131). In-hospital mortality significantly decreased (T1: 17.5%, T2: 15.8%, and T3: 12.2%; trend P = .017).
CONCLUSIONS: There have been significant changes in operative strategy over time in the management of type A aortic dissection, with more frequent use of valve-sparing procedures, bioprosthetic aortic valve substitutes, antegrade cerebral perfusion strategies, and hypothermic circulatory arrest. Most importantly, a significant decrease of in-hospital mortality was observed during the 20-year timespan.
Volume
153
Issue
4
First Page
74
Last Page
74
ISSN
1097-685X
Published In/Presented At
Parikh, N., Trimarchi, S., Gleason, T. G., Kamman, A. V., di Eusanio, M., Myrmel, T., Korach, A., Maniar, H., Ota, T., Khoynezhad, A., Montgomery, D. G., Desai, N. D., Eagle, K. A., Nienaber, C. A., Isselbacher, E. M., Bavaria, J., Sundt, T. M., & Patel, H. J. (2017). Changes in operative strategy for patients enrolled in the International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection interventional cohort program. The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery, 153(4), S74–S79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2016.12.029
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
28168983
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article