• J Cardiovasc Med (Hagerstown) · Feb 2017

    Clinical and echocardiographic predictors of long-term outcome of a large cohort of patients with bicuspid aortic valve.

    • Marco Morosin, Valeria Leonelli, Rita Piazza, Matteo Cassin, Luigi Neglia, Elisa Leiballi, Eugenio Cervesato, Giulia Barbati, Gianfranco Sinagra, and Gian Luigi Nicolosi.
    • aCardiology Dept - Azienda per l'Assistenza Sanitaria N.5 'Friuli Occidentale', Pordenone bCardiovascular Dept 'Ospedali Riuniti' Trieste and Postgraduate School Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Trieste, Trieste cCardiology Dept - ARC, Azienda per l'Assistenza Sanitaria N.5 'Friuli Occidentale', Pordenone dResident Postgraduate School Cardiovascular Science, University of Palermo, Palermo.
    • J Cardiovasc Med (Hagerstown). 2017 Feb 1; 18 (2): 74-82.

    Background And ObjectivesBicuspid aortic valve (BAV) disease is the most common congenital cardiac malformation. The aim of the present article is to determine clinical and echocardiographic prognostic factors and provide a predictive model of outcome of a large cohort of patients with BAV.MethodsWe retrospectively enrolled 337 patients consecutively assessed for echocardiography at our Cardiology Department from 1993 to 2014. We considered aortic valve replacement, aortic surgery and cardiovascular death as a clinical combined end-point. Predictors of outcome were determined by Cox regression.ResultsMean age was 29.2 ± 19.8 years, median 27.1 years. A total of 38.4% patients presented a history of hypertension. Mean duration of follow-up was 8.4 ± 6.1 years, range 0-21 years. A total of 73 patients underwent aortic valve replacement and/or aortic surgery during follow-up. Age at surgery was 45.2 ± 15.6 years. Seven patients died because of cardiovascular causes. At multivariate analysis, baseline clinical predictors were history of hypertension [hazard ratio (HR) 2.289, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.350-3.881, P = 0.002], larger ascending aortic diameter (HR 2.537, 95% CI 1.888-3.410, P < 0.001), moderate-to-severe aortic regurgitation (HR 2.266, 95% CI 1.402-3.661, P = 0.001) and moderate-to-severe aortic stenosis (HR 2.807, 95% CI 1.476-5.338, P = 0.002). A predictive model was created by integrating these four independent covariates. It allows the calculation of calculate a risk score for each patient, which helps better tailor appropriate treatment in BAV patients.ConclusionAt enrolment, history of hypertension, a wider aortic diameter, moderate-to-severe aortic regurgitation and aortic stenosis were independently correlated to combined end-point. Long-term follow-up showed low cardiovascular mortality (2.1%) and a high prevalence of cardiac surgery (21.6%).

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