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World Journal of Cardiology-Baishideng Publishing
World J Cardiol. 2012 January 26; 4 (1) : 8-14.
Published online 2012 January 26. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v4.i1.8.
Clinical and prognostic implications of atrial fibrillation in patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation
Pablo Salinas, Raúl Moreno, Luis Calvo, Santiago Jiménez-Valero, Guillermo Galeote, Angel Sánchez-Recalde, Teresa López-Fernández, Sergio Garcia-Blas, Diego Iglesias, Luis Riera, Isidro Moreno-Gómez, Jose María Mesa, Ignacio Plaza, Rocio Ayala, Rosa Gonzalez and José-Luis López-Sendón.
Pablo Salinas, Raúl Moreno, Luis Calvo, Santiago Jiménez-Valero, Guillermo Galeote, Angel Sánchez-Recalde, Division of Interventional Cardiology, University Hospital La Paz, 28046 Madrid, Spain
Teresa López-Fernández, Unit of Echocardiography, University Hospital La Paz, 28046 Madrid, Spain
Sergio Garcia-Blas, Diego Iglesias, José-Luis López-Sendón, Department of Cardiology, University Hospital La Paz, 28046 Madrid, Spain
Luis Riera, Vascular Surgery, University Hospital La Paz, 28046 Madrid, Spain
Isidro Moreno-Gómez, Department of Cardiac Anaesthesia, University Hospital La Paz, 28046 Madrid, Spain
Jose María Mesa, Cardiac Surgery, University Hospital La Paz, 28046 Madrid, Spain
Ignacio Plaza, Department of Cardiology, Hospital Infanta Sofia, 28031 San Sebastian de los Reyes, Madrid, Spain
Rocio Ayala, Rosa Gonzalez, Department of Cardiology, Hospital de la Cruz Roja, 28003 Madrid, Spain
Author contributions: Salinas P and Moreno R designed the database, revised and analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript; Salinas P, Moreno R, Calvo L, Jiménez-Valero S, Galeote G and Sánchez-Recalde A performed the procedures; Garcia-Blas S and Iglesias D collected the data and contributed to the database; Riera L, Moreno-Gómez I and Mesa JM provided vascular surgery, anesthesia and cardiac surgery support for the procedures; Teresa Lopez-Fernandez provided echocardiographic monitoring during the procedures and cardiac imaging support; Plaza I, Ayala R and Gonzalez R provided clinical support and contributed to the clinical selection of the patients; López-Sendón JL provided support for the design of the study and revised the final manuscript.
Correspondence to: Raúl Moreno, MD, Division of Interventional Cardiology, University Hospital La Paz, Paseo La Castellana, 264, 28046 Madrid, Spain. raulmorenog@terra.es
Telephone: +34-91-2071775 Fax: +34-91-2071775
Received September 25, 2011; Revised December 20, 2011; Accepted December 27, 2011;
Abstract
AIM: To study a cohort of consecutive patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) and compare the outcomes of atrial fibrillation (AF) patients vs patients in sinus rhythm (SR).
METHODS: All consecutive patients undergoing TAVI in our hospital were included. The AF group comprised patients in AF at the time of TAVI or with history of AF, and were compared with the SR group. Procedural, echocardiographic and follow-up variables were compared. Likewise, the CHA 2DS 2-VASC stroke risk score and HAS-BLED bleeding risk score and antithrombotic treatment at discharge in AF patients were compared with that in SR patients.
RESULTS: From a total of 34 patients undergoing TAVI, 17 (50%) were allocated to the AF group, of whom 15 (88%) were under chronic oral anticoagulation. Patients in the AF group were similar to those in the SR group except for a trend ( P = 0.07) for a higher logistic EuroSCORE (28% vs 19%), and a higher prevalence of hypertension (82% vs 53%) and chronic renal failure (17% vs 0%). Risk of both stroke and bleeding was high in the AF group (mean CHA 2DS 2-VASC 4.3, mean HAS-BLED 2.9). In the AF group, treatment at discharge included chronic oral anticoagulation in all except one case, and in association with an antiplatelet drug in 57% of patients. During a mean follow-up of 11 mo (maximum 32), there were only two strokes, none of them during the peri-procedural period: one in the AF group at 30 mo and one in the SR group at 3 mo. There were no statistical differences in procedural success, and clinical outcome (survival at 1 year 81% vs 74% in AF and SR groups, respectively, P = NS).
CONCLUSION: Patients in AF undergoing TAVI show a trend to a higher surgical risk. However, in our cohort, patients in AF did not have a higher stroke rate compared to the SR group, and the prognosis was similar in both groups.
Keywords: Aortic stenosis, Transcatheter aortic valve implantation, Stroke, Atrial fibrillation
INTRODUCTION
Degenerative aortic stenosis (AS) is currently the most prevalent acquired valvular heart disease, occurring in 4.6% of adults ≥ 75 years old[ 1]. The classic treatment for symptomatic severe AS is surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR), which modifies the natural history of the disease and has improved survival in historical comparisons[ 2 - 4]. Unfortunately, one third of patients who are recognized to need surgery are rejected, generally because of unacceptably high surgical risk[ 5]. Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has had successful and constant development during the last few years to become a real alternative for these high-risk patients[ 6].
With more than 10 000 implants in Europe, the TAVI technique has reached maturity with implantation success in ≥ 95% and 30 d mortality < 10% in transfemoral procedures and < 20% in transapical procedures[ 7 - 9]. In the randomized Placement of Aortic TraNscatheter Valve Trial (PARTNER), cohort B proved superiority of TAVI compared with medical treatment (including aortic valvuloplasty) in inoperable patients, with an outstanding 20% absolute decrease in mortality at 1 year[ 10]. In the recently reported results of PARTNER cohort A, the TAVI procedure met non-inferiority criteria compared with SAVR in a high-risk population, thus becoming an alternative to surgery for patients accepted for surgery but with a high surgical risk[ 11].
One of the limitations, however, of TAVI in the PARTNER cohort A trial was a significantly higher incidence of stroke in comparison with SAVR. In this elderly, high surgical risk population, stroke is one of the biggest concerns a clinician may have because of the associated disability and mortality. Stroke rates after SAVR are reported to be around 5% in a high-risk population[ 12], and they are associated with aortic cross-clamping and hypoperfusion during cardiopulmonary by-pass. TAVI procedures have reported stroke rates below 5%, albeit with a subclinical incidence of 70%-80% in magnetic resonance studies (40%-50% for similar studies in SAVR)[ 7 , 13 , 14]. It is attributed to manipulation of large catheters in atherosclerotic and calcified aortas and to embolization after valvuloplasty or valve implantation. However, apart from these technical reasons for stroke in patients undergoing TAVI, atrial fibrillation (AF) is a potential confounding factor in the relationship between aortic replacement and stroke, and little has been reported to date on this issue. AF is a well-known risk factor for stroke (approximately 1 in 5 strokes are caused by AF), and is very prevalent in old patients (5%-15% in ≥ 80-year-old patients)[ 15]. It is also a common comorbid condition in the late stages of aortic valve disease. This study aimed to determine the influence of AF in the TAVI population, on procedure complications and on long-term prognosis, as well as to analyze the antithrombotic treatment at discharge.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study population and definitions
At our center, a total of 34 implants have been performed (31 transfemoral and 3 transapical). All TAVI patients were excluded from conventional SAVR because of high surgical risk in a ‘heart team’ meeting composed of clinical cardiologists, interventional cardiologists, anesthesiologists and cardiac surgeons. In a dedicated prospective database we recorded data from all evaluated patients, implantations and follow-up. Variables included were basal characteristics of the patients, symptoms and intervention indication, EuroSCORE, echocardiographic data, procedural characteristics and complications during the procedure, following the published recommendations[ 16].
TAVI procedures were performed in a catheterization laboratory under general anesthesia, with most of the patients being extubated before leaving the laboratory. All cases were implanted with the Edwards-SAPIEN transcatheter valve system (Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, United States)[ 17]. Vascular access was obtained by surgical cutdown of the femoral artery, and closure was secured by direct suture of the femoral artery. The prosthesis delivery and implantation process has been previously described[ 18 , 19]. If significant coronary artery disease was found in the preliminary study, percutaneous coronary revascularization was performed approximately 1 mo prior to the procedure.
For this paper, we divided our implanted population in two groups: those in AF or with a previous history of AF (AF group) and those in sinus rhythm (SR) without a history of AF (SR group). We calculated previously validated CHA 2DS 2VASC and HAS-BLED scores to assess the stroke and bleeding risk, respectively; and the suitability of antithrombotic treatment[ 15 , 20 , 21]. As for the HAS-BLED score, we defined major bleeding as any bleeding requiring hospitalization and/or causing a decrease in hemoglobin of more than 2 g/L and/or requiring blood transfusion, which was not a hemorrhagic stroke[ 21]. Chronic renal failure was defined as serum creatinine levels ≥ 200 mmol/L (cut-off value of EuroSCORE risk score). Left ventricular ejection fraction was estimated by the biplanar Simpson method. We also recorded treatment at discharge of all patients. Recommended medical treatment after TAVI is aspirin plus 75 mg clopidogrel for 3-6 mo, and only aspirin afterwards, but final treatment at discharge was open to the clinician’s preference. If warfarin was used, target INR values were 2.0-3.0. Patients without AF before TAVI but developing AF during or after the procedure were maintained in the SR group for statistical comparisons, but received special attention and will be described in detail.
Follow-up
Clinical follow-up was obtained in all patients by clinical visits, and/or telephone interview. The following clinical end-points were determined: death, myocardial infarction, stroke, aortic valve surgery, hospitalization because of heart failure, and the combination of all of them (MACE, major adverse cardiac events).
Also, several echocardiographic studies were performed at follow-up (at discharge, at 6 mo, 1 year, and every year subsequently) to evaluate prosthetic function (maximum and mean trans-aortic pressure gradients, aortic valve area, aortic valve regurgitation, and left ventricular function).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed with PASW version 17.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago, IL). Categorical variables are expressed as proportions (percentages) and continuous variables as mean ± standard deviation unless otherwise specified. Comparisons between groups were performed with the Student t test (comparison of 2 means) or Chi-square test (comparison of proportions). Comparative survival analysis was performed with the Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank test. Associations with a P value < 0.05 were considered statistically significant, although all P values are provided.
RESULTS
Baseline characteristics of patients with vs without AF
Main characteristics of both AF and non-AF groups are shown in Table 1. There were significant differences only in the ‘prior warfarin use’ item, but there was a trend ( P = 0.068) towards a higher prevalence of hypertension and chronic renal failure as well as a higher mean EuroSCORE in the AF group. Echocardiographic features of the valve disease and other coexistent heart diseases were also similar between both groups. All patients had symptomatic AS, with no differences in the accompanying symptoms: similar proportion of heart failure (76.4% in AF patients vs 88.2% in SR patients, P = 0.37); a numerically but not statistically higher rate of angina in the AF group (43.8% vs 17.7%, P = 0.1); and 4 patients with syncope in each group.
Table 1
Table 1
Baseline characteristics of the transcatheter aortic valve implantation population in atrial fibrillation and non-atrial fibrillation groups (n = 17) n (%)
Average CHA 2DS 2-VASC score for the whole AF group was 4.3 (range, 2-7) whereas the average HAS-BLED bleeding score was 2.9 (range, 2-5).
Procedural and in-hospital outcomes
Procedural and in-hospital outcomes of both groups are shown in Table 2. There were no significant differences in any of the peri-procedural outcomes. There were 2 deaths in the AF group: one patient died because of coronary obstruction, myocardial infarction and shock, and the other because of respiratory complications attributed to previous pulmonary fibrosis and severe pulmonary hypertension (no prosthesis dysfunction). There were 2 deaths in the SR group: one transfemoral procedure complicated by perforation with the temporary pacemaker lead, and one transapical procedure with post-procedural severe bleeding at the site of ventricular puncture 48 h after the procedure. Only 2 patients (6%) had new onset AF during TAVI admission. One patient from the SR group had new onset AF 2 d after TAVI and was discharged under warfarin plus clopidogrel (this patient was kept in SR group “per protocol”, as described in methods). The other patient from the AF group was in SR at the start of TAVI, but developed AF during the procedure and was discharged with AF under warfarin treatment. None of these patients had events in the follow-up.
Table 2
Table 2
Procedural and in-hospital outcomes (n = 17) n (%)
Post-discharge management and clinical outcome
During hospitalization (and at 30-d follow-up), 4 patients died: one after transapical and 3 after transfemoral procedures. Therefore, survival at 30 d was 88.2% in the overall study population, 90.3% in patients undergoing trans-femoral TAVI, and 66.7% in those undergoing trans-apical TAVI. Thus, 30 patients were discharged alive: 15 from SR group and 15 from AF group. All patients in the SR group were treated after valve implantation with aspirin 100 mg/d plus clopidogrel 75 mg/d for 3-6 mo. AF patients were treated according to the clinical cardiologist’s preference, as shown in Table 3. The most common treatment at discharge was warfarin alone, followed by warfarin plus aspirin.
Table 3
Table 3
Antithrombotic treatment at discharge in patients of the atrial fibrillation group who survived to hospital discharge (n = 15)
Clinical follow-up was completed in 100% of the patients. Mean follow-up for the whole cohort was 10.4 mo, with a maximum of 32 mo. Kaplan-Meier curves for survival are shown in Figure 1A. Mean survival was similar in both groups: 23.8 mo in the SR group vs 25.6 mo in the AF group (log-rank, Mantel-Cox: P = 0.98; hazard ratio (HR), 0.99; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.26-3.75). Survival at 30 d was 81.4% in the SR group vs 88.2% in the AF group. Survival at 1 year was 74% in the SR group vs 80.9% in the AF group. Figure 1B depicts survival free from a composite MACE endpoint (death, stroke, myocardial infarction, aortic valve surgery, heart failure admission, and prosthesis failure). Survival free from MACE was similar: 21.4 mo in SR vs 21.7 mo in AF (log-rank, Mantel-Cox: P = 0.92; HR, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.29-3.11). Survival at 30 d was 81.4% in the SR group vs 82.4% in the AF group; whereas survival at 1 year was 65.8% in the SR group vs 68.4% in the AF group.
Figure 1
Figure 1
Figure 1
Kaplan-Meier curves. A: Survival; B: Survival free from MACE (death, stroke, myocardial infarction, aortic valve surgery, heart failure admission, and prosthesis failure). AF: Atrial fibrillation; SR: Sinus rhythm.
Importantly, there were 2 strokes in the follow up. One took place in the AF group at 30.3 mo (a patient treated with aspirin and warfarin), and contributed to the patient’s death due to respiratory complications. The other happened at 3.3 mo in the SR group (aspirin), and was classified as atherosclerotic with the patient remaining in SR, and the patient was discharged with mild sequelae. There were no documented major bleedings either in AF or non-AF patients in the entire follow-up.
Echocardiographic follow-up
Follow-up echocardiography was performed at 6 mo, 1 year, and every year subsequently. For this study we selected the longest available echocardiographic follow-up, with a mean of 14.7 mo. There were no differences between AF and non-AF patients in any of the echocardiographic items during the follow-up (Table 4). There were no cases of prosthesis thrombosis, or prosthesis failure.
Table 4
Table 4
Follow-up echocardiographic evaluation of the prosthetic valve (mean follow-up 14.7 mo)
DISCUSSION
The PARTNER trial cohort A results have lifted the TAVI procedure from “alternative procedure” to “non-inferior” compared to surgery in patients acceptable for surgery but with a relatively high risk. However, a new concern appeared, as stroke rates were significantly higher in the TAVI arm compared to the SAVR group (8.3% vs 4.3% at 1 year, P = 0.04)[ 11]. This was not totally unexpected, because 3-5% of patients undergoing cardiac surgery suffer a periprocedural stroke[ 22], and prior studies with TAVI had described similar or even higher subclinical brain ischemic events[ 13 , 14].
We analyzed the potential influence that AF, a first-line risk factor for stroke, could have in the stroke rate of the TAVI population. Our cohort had a slightly higher prevalence of AF compared to PARTNER population (50% vs 41% in the PARTNER TAVI arm), and interestingly AF patients had higher risk compared to non-AF patients (logistic EuroSCORE 27.9 vs 18.7), with otherwise no relevant differences in baseline characteristics. However, this higher risk did not translate into differences in TAVI procedure complications, with only a trend toward a longer hospital stay (14 d vs 10 d, P = 0.22) and a more frequent need of transfusion in the AF group (29% vs 12%, P = 0.2). In our cohort, we had no strokes during admission and the stroke rate in the follow-up was as low as 6%, with no differences among groups. The fact that the 2 strokes occurred during follow-up after discharge and not in the peri-operative period does not support the use of embolic protection devices during TAVI, that has been proposed by some groups[ 23].
Survival and other long-term events were also similar between patients with and without AF before TAVI, as well as prosthesis hemodynamics. The follow-up estimated valve area was higher (non-significantly) in the non-AF group, but that was probably due to the lower number of patients with 26 mm valves in the AF group. This is supported also by the similar gradients found in both groups (Table 4).
In spite of the long experience with bioprosthesis, treatment at discharge of patients with aortic bioprostheses is still controversial, and the recommendations after TAVI are based only on expert consensus. Guidelines for the management of patients with valvular heart disease published by the American Heart Association and the European Society of Cardiology all recommend the prescribing of aspirin to all recipients of bioprosthetic heart valves (Class I, Level of evidence C) as well as the consideration of warfarin use during the first 3 mo, notwithstanding the lack of evidence[ 4 , 24]. Some studies have found no advantage of 3-mo warfarin treatment in patients with no other indication for anticoagulation[ 25 , 26].
Our AF cohort received antithrombotic treatment according to stroke and bleeding scores, as recommended in the AF guidelines and irrespective of the presence of the aortic bioprosthesis[ 27 , 28]. This led to similar rates of stroke, major hemorrhage and MACE events, supporting this management.
The main limitation of this paper was the small study population that could make some differences among groups non-significant. Nevertheless this is somewhat balanced with a long-term follow up of the patients, that showed similar survival and event-free survival curves. We performed no routine brain imaging, assuming the under-detection of clinically silent cerebral events, but focused on clinically evident strokes that were of major relevance to the clinician. All treatment data was observational, so it should only be used for hypothesis-generating purposes, with limited value due to the heterogeneity of therapeutic strategies.
In the absence of specific guidelines or previous literature to choose a specific antithrombotic treatment after TAVI in AF patients, the treatment at discharge was tailored to each patient, according to both bleeding and stroke scores. This treatment obtained similar rates of stroke, bleeding or MACE events during follow-up. In our cohort, AF patients undergoing TAVI had similar prognosis despite the trend toward a higher risk compared with the non-AF patients.
COMMENTS
Background
Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has become a safe and effective alternative for high surgical risk aortic stenosis patients. Stroke rates in a recent randomized trial were found to be superior in the TAVI group than in the surgical group. Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a potential confounding factor as it is related to age and stroke, and has not been studied in this setting. Furthermore, there are no specific recommendations for antithrombotic treatment in the TAVI population, and its influence in the follow-up
Research frontiers
Stroke rates in patients undergoing TAVI procedures are a major concern for the clinician, and the influence of AF in this setting has not been addressed. Antithrombotic treatment of AF patients after TAVI implantation is not well established.
Innovations and breakthroughs
Clinically relevant strokes after TAVI were globally low, and there are no differences among AF and sinus rhythm (SR) patients. Antithrombotic treatment after TAVI tailored according to stroke and bleeding risks, and irrespective of the presence of the transcatheter valve obtained similar stroke rates to SR patients in the follow-up.
Applications
The study suggest tailoring the long-term antithrombotic treatment of AF patients undergoing TAVI to the stroke and bleeding risks, irrespective of the presence of the transcatheter valve. Future studies with larger population should verify this hypothesis and confirm the finding of similar stroke rates in this setting.
Peer review
The paper investigated the potential influence of AF on the stroke rate in a consecutive TAVI collection. Herein, they found no strokes during admission and no differences between the AF- and non-AF-group in the follow up.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Dr. Salinas receives an educational grant from Cordis Corp. and the Spanish Society of Cardiology. To Dr. Filgueiras and Dr. Dobarro who contributed to the database and the selection of patients for TAVI.
Footnotes
Peer reviewer: Dirk Skowasch, MD, Department of Cardiology, University of Bonn, Sigmund-Freud-Strasse 25, 53105 Bonn, Germany
S- Editor Cheng JX L- Editor Cant MR E- Editor Zheng XM
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