Outcome of patients undergoing isolated tricuspid repair or replacement surgery

Marco Russo*, Michele Di Mauro, Guglielmo Saitto, Antonio Lio, Paolo Berretta, Maurizio Taramasso, Roberto Scrofani, Alessandro Della Corte, Sandro Sponga, Ernesto Greco, Matteo Saccocci, Antonio Calafiore, Giacomo Bianchi, Dror B Leviner, Andrea Biondi, Ugolino Livi, Erez Sharoni, Carlo De Vincentiis, Marco Di Eusanio, Carlo AntonaGiovanni Troise, Marco Solinas, Guenther Laufer, Francesco Musumeci, Martin Andreas

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The interest in isolated tricuspid valve disease has rapidly increased recently. However, clinical trials and registry data are rare in the surgical literature. This study aimed to describe the early and long-term outcomes of a real-world experience in isolated tricuspid procedures comparing repair and replacement strategies.

METHODS: The Surgical-Tricuspid study is a multicentre retrospective study that enrolled adult patients who had undergone isolated tricuspid valve surgery at 13 international sites. Propensity score-matched analysis was used to compare repair versus replacement.

RESULTS: A cohort of 426 patients was enrolled [mean age: 55 (16) years; 56% female]. After matching, 175 comparable pairs were analysed. Preoperative left ventricular ejection fraction was 55(9) vs 56(9) (P = 0.8) while moderate-severe tricuspid regurgitation was present in 95% of cases. The 30-day mortality rate was 4.0% vs 8.0% in the repair and replacement groups, respectively (P = 0.115). The rates of re-exploration for bleeding (6.9% vs 13.1% P = 0.050), permanent pacemaker implantation (5.1% vs 12.0%; P = 0.022) and blood transfusion (46% vs 62%; P = 0.002) were higher in the replacement group. Cumulative survival rates at 3, 5 and 7 years in the repair group were 84 (3)%, 75 (4)% and 56 (9)% vs 71 (4)%, 66 (5)% and 58 (5)% in the replacement group (P = 0.001) while cumulative incidence for reoperation at 10 years did not differ between groups [repair 10 (1)% vs replacement 9 (1)%; P = 0.469].

CONCLUSIONS: The data from the Surgical-Tricuspid study reported a high risk for patients undergoing tricuspid surgery. Isolated valve repair offered reduced early and late mortality with no difference regarding reoperation rate when compared with replacement.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberezac230
Number of pages9
JournalEuropean Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
Volume62
Issue number3
Early online date21 Apr 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Aug 2022

Keywords

  • Isolated tricuspid valve disease
  • REGURGITATION
  • RISKS
  • SOCIETY
  • Surgery
  • Survival
  • TRENDS
  • Tricuspid valve
  • VALVE SURGERY

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