# Three-Year Outcomes After Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement With a Bioprosthetic Valve from the Multi-Centre IMPACT Registry

**Authors:** Farhad Bakhtiary, Peter Benedikt, Nikolaos Bonaros, Michael Borger, Mirko Doss, Richard Feyrer, Jürg Grünenfelder, Tamer Owais, Seymur Karimli, Ka Yan Lam, Andreas Liebold, Andreas Martens, Parwis Massoudy, Islam Batashev, Jochen Pöling, Maximilian Philipp Scherner, Justus Strauch, Matthias Thielmann, Andreas Vötsch, Thomas Walther, Alberto Weber, Stefan Wiesinger, Matthias Eden, Jürgen Kammler, Beate Botta, Nataliya Trushina, Anjaly Vijayan, Peter Bramlage, Andreas Zierer

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/icvts/ivag056 · 2026-03-05

## TL;DR

This study reports 3-year outcomes of aortic valve replacement using a bioprosthetic valve in patients with severe aortic stenosis.

## Contribution

The study provides real-world 3-year data on survival and valve performance of the INSPIRIS RESILIA bioprosthesis.

## Key findings

- Three-year overall survival was 91.0% with high freedom from valve-related mortality and dysfunction.
- Functional class improved significantly, with most patients moving from class III/IV to lower severity.
- Mean transvalvular gradient remained low at 11.9 mmHg, indicating good hemodynamic performance.

## Abstract

To investigate 3-year outcomes of surgical aortic valve replacement using the INSPIRIS RESILIA aortic valve bioprosthesis in patients with severe aortic stenosis.

IMPACT registry is a prospective, multicentre, international registry with a 5-year follow-up. After 3 years, haemodynamic performance, all-cause mortality, and valve-related mortality were determined.

A total of 556 patients who underwent surgical aortic valve replacement with the INSPIRIS RESILIA aortic valve were enrolled between December 2019 and June 2021. The mean age was 63.4 ± 8.5 years, 29.0% were female, with a EuroSCORE II of 2.2 ± 2.5% and an STS score of 1.7 ± 2.2%. Hypertension (66.2%), coronary artery disease (34.7%), and diabetes (18.4%) were the most common comorbidities. A total of 49.3% of patients underwent full sternotomy, 58.3% isolated aortic valve replacement. The most commonly implanted valve sizes were 23 mm (35.4%) and 25 mm (30.9%). At 3 years, overall survival was 91.0%, freedom from valve-related mortality was 97.5%, from prosthetic endocarditis 96.0%, from stroke 91.5%, from valve-related dysfunction 98.0%, from reintervention 96.2%, from structural valve deterioration stage 2 96.8%, and from stage 3 99.4%. The mean transvalvular gradient was 11.9 mmHg at 3 years, with an indexed effective orifice area of 0.8 cm2/m2. Functional class improved from 41.2% class III or IV at baseline to 5.7% at 3 years.

Three-year outcomes, including survival and haemodynamic and functional status after surgical aortic valve replacement using the INSPIRIS RESILIA bioprosthetic aortic valve, were reported in a real-world patient population with severe aortic stenosis.

NCT04053088.

Aortic valve (AV) intervention remains a standard choice for severe aortic stenosis (AS), with surgery recommended for patients under the age of 70.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** aortic stenosis (MONDO:0042981)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MESH:D020521), aortic stenosis (MESH:D001024), diabetes (MESH:D003920), valve-related dysfunction (MESH:D006349), coronary artery disease (MESH:D003324), prosthetic endocarditis (MESH:D004696), Hypertension (MESH:D006973)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12981659/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12981659