Clinical Impact of Flow-Adjusted Transprosthetic Pressure Gradient After Aortic Valve Replacement
Takahiro Ohmori, Arudo Hiraoka, Toshinori Totsugawa, Satoru Kishimoto, Yuki Yoshioka, Genta Chikazawa, Taichi Sakaguchi

TL;DR
This study shows that a new measure called flow-adjusted pressure gradient can predict long-term heart outcomes after aortic valve surgery better than existing methods.
Contribution
The study introduces flow-adjusted pressure gradient (MPG/SV) as a novel predictor of cardiac events after aortic valve replacement.
Findings
Flow-adjusted pressure gradient (MPG/SV) was significantly associated with cardiac events after aortic valve replacement.
An MPG/SV cutoff of 0.24 mm Hg/mL was identified as an independent risk factor for cardiac events.
Patients with higher MPG/SV had lower cardiac event-free survival rates at 5 years.
Abstract
It is still controversial whether prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM) adversely affects long-term outcomes after aortic valve replacement (AVR). The aim of this study was to examine whether flow-adjusted pressure gradient is a valid new indicator of long-term outcomes. Data collected from 184 patients undergoing isolated AVR for severe aortic stenosis from October 2012 to September 2016 were analyzed. Flow-adjusted pressure gradient was defined as mean pressure gradient divided by stroke volume (MPG/SV). The effect of PPM and MPG/SV on long-term cardiac events and survival was evaluated. Overall mortality was 8.2%, and the incidence of cardiac events was 9.2% (median follow-up period, 5.5 years). Moderate to severe PPM was present in 30.0% of patients and did not correlate with cardiac events (P = .13). The mean pressure gradient and stroke volume were also not predictive, but MPG/SV…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Valve Diseases and Treatments · Cardiac Imaging and Diagnostics · Cardiac and Coronary Surgery Techniques
