Abstract 18424: Elective Cardiac Arrest in Isolated Aortic Valve Surgery: Comparison of Blood-cardioplegia versus HTK-Bretschneider Solution in 7005 Consecutive Patients
IntroductionAssessing the impact of HTK-Bretschneider solution versus blood-cardioplegia on short- and long-term outcome after isolated aortic valve replacement (AVR).HypothesisHTK-Bretschneider is not inferior to Blood-cardioplegia for isolated aortic valve replacement.MethodsScreening of our insti...
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Published in | Circulation (New York, N.Y.) Vol. 132; no. Suppl_3 Suppl 3; p. A18424 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc
10.11.2015
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Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | IntroductionAssessing the impact of HTK-Bretschneider solution versus blood-cardioplegia on short- and long-term outcome after isolated aortic valve replacement (AVR).HypothesisHTK-Bretschneider is not inferior to Blood-cardioplegia for isolated aortic valve replacement.MethodsScreening of our institutional database revealed 7290 consecutive patients who underwent AVR between 11/1994 and 06/2015. In the majority of patients (n=5998; 83%) antegrade infusion of htk-bretschneider solution (custodiol®) was used for elective cardiac arrest (Group A). Intermittent cold blood-cardioplegia was chosen in 1007 patients (14%; Group B). All preoperative risk-factors were considered for risk-factor analysis influencing outcome.ResultsEarly mortality was equal between the subgroups (p=0.22). Postoperative complications like pacemaker implantation (p=0.01) or low cardiac output were more likely to occur in group B (p=0.02). Overall long term survival was inferior for patients receiving elective cardiac arrest with cold blood cardioplegia (p<0.001). Cox-regression identified age (HR1.063 ; p<0.001), end stage renal disease (ESDR; HR:4.8; p<0.001), history of PCI (HR1.3; p=0.03), active infective endocarditis (AIE; HR2.1; p<0.001), neurological dysfunction (HR1.4; p=0.02), low ejection fraction (EF<30%; HR2.5; p<0.001), prior cardiac surgery (HR:1,5; p=0.02) and emergent surgical intervention (HR2.5; p<0.001) being highly associated with long term survival and occurring more frequently in group B. Artificial low-risk and high-risk groups showed no differences in longevity depending on cardioplegic solutions (p=0.35).ConclusionsBlood-cardioplegia for elective cardiac arrest seems to be preferred when complex aortic valve surgery is expected. However, HTK-Bretschneider solution yields equivalent longevity to blood-cardioplegia, even after surgery demanding extended cross-clamp times. |
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ISSN: | 0009-7322 1524-4539 |
DOI: | 10.1161/circ.132.suppl_3.18424 |