Myocardial functional changes in transfemoral versus transapical aortic valve replacement

2018 
Abstract Background Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has greatly expanded the treatment options available for patients with severe aortic stenosis at high surgical risk. Materials and methods We compared changes in myocardial function in TAVR with a transfemoral (TF) versus a transapical (TA) approach at a major tertiary hospital from 2012-2016. Traditional echocardiographic measures of cardiac structure and function were tracked, alongside the use of two-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography to measure myocardial strain and strain rates. Results For the entire cohort with complete data at all time points ( n  = 42), between the pre-TAVR baseline (mean: 20.1 d) and the post-TAVR 1-mo follow-up (mean: 32.7 d), global longitudinal strain significantly increased (from −15.6% to −18.2%, P n  = 31) and TA ( n  = 11) groups, TA patients showed persistently impaired apical longitudinal strain at the 1-mo follow-up (−15.9% versus −22.3%, P n  = 131 for TF, n  = 53 for TA) were similar in terms of 30-d mortality, readmission rate, and risk of post-TAVR acute kidney injury. However, TA patients experienced significantly longer length of hospitalization (7.58 versus 3.92 d, P  = 0.02), intensive care unit hours (105.4 versus 47.1 h, P  = 0.02), and were at a greater risk of long-term (>72 h) intensive care unit stay (45% versus 25%, P  = 0.01). Conclusions Patients undergoing TA-TAVR exhibit impaired apical longitudinal strain, although global myocardial function is similar to TF-TAVR otherwise. Myocardial strain measured by two-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography appears to be a sensitive method to detect subtle cardiac remodeling after TAVR.
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