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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Apr 2017
Multicenter Study Observational StudyChanges in operative strategy for patients enrolled in the International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection interventional cohort program.
- Neil Parikh, Santi Trimarchi, Thomas G Gleason, Arnoud V Kamman, Marco di Eusanio, Truls Myrmel, Amit Korach, Hersh Maniar, Takeyoshi Ota, Ali Khoynezhad, Daniel G Montgomery, Nimesh D Desai, Kim A Eagle, Christoph A Nienaber, Eric M Isselbacher, Joseph Bavaria, Thoralf M Sundt, and Himanshu J Patel.
- Michigan Cardiovascular Outcomes Research and Reporting Program, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, Mich.
- J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2017 Apr 1; 153 (4): S74-S79.
ObjectiveAdvancements in cardiothoracic surgery prompted investigation into changes in operative management for acute type A aortic dissections over time.MethodsOne 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).ResultsFrequency 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).ConclusionsThere 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.Copyright © 2017 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.
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