TAVI Flashcards
By reading this article, you should be able to
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Describe the grading of aortic stenosis and the role of multimodality imaging to guide management.
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Explain the limitations of traditional surgical risk classification of low, intermediate or high risk; and the refinement in assessment needed to identify which patients with severe aortic stenosis are best candidates for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI).
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Discuss the evidence for TAVI in patients deemed high risk for aortic valve surgery (with or without coronary artery bypass grafting).
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Outline the increasing evidence for surgery and TAVI as complementary modes of intervention in lower-risk groups.
Key Pts
1 Patients with symptomatic severe aortic stenosis have a high risk of death.
2 Management options include surgical aortic valve replacement, medical therapy and transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI).
3 Although echocardiography is the main tool used to grade aortic stenosis,
CT is emerging as the modality to assess the need for interventions to the aortic valve and the broader evaluation of structural heart disease.
4 Transcatheter aortic valve implantation is non-inferior to surgical aortic valve replacement in intermediate- and lower-risk candidates for surgery. It is likely that many more patients will be offered TAVI in the future.
5 It is essential that the anaesthetist providing perioperative care knows the current guidelines and evidence for TAVI.
Aetiology
Pathophysiology of aortic stenosis
Normal aortic valve area (AVA) is 2.6–3.5 cm2 in adults
Clinically relevant aortic stenosis occurs as the AVA approaches 1.0 cm2,
and the aetiology is usually degenerative or congenital
increasingly a degenerative condition associated with ageing.
Degenerative calcific aortic stenosis is more common in the UK and
tends to affect people aged >70 yrs.
Mechanical stress leads to degeneration of the previously normal tricuspid valve leaflets, giving the appearance of sclerosis when imaged with echocardiography. This form of aortic stenosis is associated with risk factors for coronary artery disease.
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- As left ventricular outflow obstruction increases,
the left ventricle becomes increasingly hypertrophied. - This process eventually becomes harmful,
with a decrease in stroke volume,
compliance and elasticity,
and diastolic dysfunction
- *preserved ejection fraction
3 Increased left atrial pressure with increasing diastolic dysfunction and subsequently increased pulmonary arterial pressure can lead to exertional breathlessness; symptoms may occur without aortic stenosis being severe
- The left ventricle becomes increasingly dependent on atrial contraction for filling, and atrial fibrillation is tolerated poorly.
Symptoms are associated with adverse outcomes and commonly develop when compensatory mechanisms begin to fail.
5 untreated symptomatic severe aortic stenosis has a 1-yr mortality approaching 50%
6 Chest pain and breathlessness arise from a mismatch in myocardial oxygen supply and demand, even in patients with normal coronary arteries.
7 Cardiac output becomes sensitive to changes in preload and arterial systolic pressure
8 Syncope (usually after exertion) can occur secondary to
reduced cardiac output and hypotension
9 Eventually, the left ventricle becomes dilated and the syndrome of heart failure ensues
10 For patients with aortic stenosis, management options for their condition include surgical aortic valve replacement, TAVI, balloon aortic valvuloplast
Recommendations for grading of aortic stenosis severity
Severe
(mild)
2017 European Society of Cardiology,
Peak velocity
≥4.0m/s
(2.6)
Mean gradient (mmHg)
>40
(20)
AVA
Cm2
<1
(>1.5)
velocity ratio
<.25
Classification of patients with and management of severe aortic stenosis
Transthoracic echocardiography is the key mode for assessing the presence and severity of aortic stenosis (Table 1). The 2017 European Society of Cardiology, European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery and the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging recommended a stepwise approach to grading of severity
There are four diagnostic categories of severe aortic stenosis.
First is high-gradient aortic stenosis,
which can be assumed irrespective
of ejection fraction and flow.
Second is low-flow low-gradient
aortic stenosis with a reduced ejection fraction.
Third is low-flow low-gradient aortic stenosis with a preserved ejection fraction, typically seen in the elderly
Fourth is normal-flow low-gradient aortic stenosis with a preserved ejection fraction, which encompasses those patients who will usually only have mild disease.
Other Ix for AS
- Exercise testing can be useful to risk stratify patients who are physically active.
- Transoesophageal echocardiography may be useful
to look in more detail at other structures,
such as the mitral valve,
but it is no longer routinely used before TAVI. - CT scanning is the standard modality for aortic valve procedures,
TAVI assessment and structural heart disease assessment more broadly,
and is a rapidly evolving area in preoperative assessment
Most centres in the UK do not routinely quantify aortic valve calcification; yet, it may be considered when Doppler echocardiography data are discordant.
score by CT scan can play an increasingly important role in these groups using the Agatston method
- stress echocardiography or CT assessment of valvular calcification as a flow-independent marker of more severe disease
5 Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging has a more limited role. However, its importance for quantifying myocardial fibrosis and identifying dual pathology is recognised,
- Serum brain natriuretic peptide concentrations can be
useful for surveillance in asymptomatic patients - LHC - rare in clinical practice
Indications for TAVI
severe aortic stenosis in which surgical aortic valve replacement is not suitable
Severe comorbidity
Age ≥75 yrs
Previous cardiac surgery
Favourable vascular access
Porcelain aorta
Intact coronary artery bypass grafts
Chest wall deformity
Surgical aortic valve replacement
- Logistic EuroSCORE <10%
- Valvular endocarditis
- Short distance between coronary ostia and aortic valve annulus
- Size of aortic valve out of TAVI range
- Unfavourable valve morphology
- Left ventricular thrombus
- Severe coronary artery, mitral, tricuspid or aortic disease requiring surgical intervention
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Broadly, asymptomatic patients with a reduced ejection fraction are offered surgery
Asymptomatic patients with a normal ejection fraction, who are not physically active, have risk factors severe valve calcification, high peak velocity or progression and pulmonary arterial hypertension low risk for surgery are offered surgery.
Contraindications to TAVI
The only absolute contraindication to TAVI is active endocarditis
Patient-related factors include
comorbidity or frailty precluding improvement of quality of life
and estimated life expectancy <2 yrs.
Technical factors include inadequate annulus size (<18 and >30 mm);
including short distance between the annulus and coronary ostium;
.
valve morphology; off-label use in severe aortic regurgitation
Approaches
usually performed - femoral arteries
subclavian arteries
cardiac apex
directly into the aorta
Evidence
30d mortality
low<4%
High Risk >8%
Partner A B
A - non inferioity - similiar 1 yr mortality
B - vs medical tx - tavi reduced mortality
CVA more common
Partner 2 - TAVI in intermed risk - non inferior all cause mortality at 2 years
PARTNER 3
educed incidence of postoperative atrial fibrillation, acute kidney injury and bleeding
Role of the preoperative multidisciplinary ‘heart team’
- TAVI registry
Adverse events reports - Patient selection MDT
TAVI Operator
Cardiac Surgeon
Imaging cardiologist
Multidisciplinary team input from other specialties, including anaesthesia, vascular radiology, vascular surgery and medicine for the elderly, will be required for some patients;
- during the consent process, patients should be told about all treatment options, including their advantages and disadvantages.
- Specialised centres
clinicians with xperience and training
There should be cardiac and vascular surgical support available, should complications develop, which may need to be addressed urgently.
Organisational
Multidisciplinary TAVI ‘heart team’.
This team should include interventional cardiologists,
cardiothoracic surgeons,
valve clinic coordinators,
cardiac catheter laboratory staff,
a cardiac anaesthetist,
the referring cardiologist,
a structural heart disease expert and a
cardiac radiologist
and a geriatrician.
Risks benefits
Need careful weighing along with patient factors and the preference of patients and other key stakeholders
coexisting medical conditions, are elderly and may be frail, which all make the risk/benefit assessment challenging.
Technical suitability and peripheral arterial access