Volume 25, Issue 1 pp. 9-15

Late Echocardiographic and Clinical Outcomes after Mitral Valve Repair for Degenerative Disease

Louis-Mathieu Stevens M.D., S.M.

Louis-Mathieu Stevens M.D., S.M.

Department of Surgery

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Arsène-Joseph Basmadjian M.D.

Arsène-Joseph Basmadjian M.D.

Department of Medicine, Montreal Heart Institute and Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

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Denis Bouchard M.D.

Denis Bouchard M.D.

Department of Surgery

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Ismaïl El-Hamamsy M.D.

Ismaïl El-Hamamsy M.D.

Department of Surgery

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Philippe Demers M.D.

Philippe Demers M.D.

Department of Surgery

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Michel Carrier M.D.

Michel Carrier M.D.

Department of Surgery

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Louis P. Perrault M.D., Ph.D.

Louis P. Perrault M.D., Ph.D.

Department of Surgery

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Raymond Cartier M.D.

Raymond Cartier M.D.

Department of Surgery

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Michel Pellerin M.D.

Michel Pellerin M.D.

Department of Surgery

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First published: 27 December 2009
Citations: 17
Address for correspondence: Michel Pellerin, M.D., Department of Surgery, Montreal Heart Institute, 5000 Belanger Street, Montreal, Quebec, H1T 1C8, Canada. Fax: +514-376-1355; e-mail: [email protected]

This work was supported by the Michael and Renata Hornstein Chair in Cardiac Surgery, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec. Salary support (to LMS) was provided by a fellowship award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Clinical Research Initiative, Ottawa, Ontario.

Paper presented as poster: Clinical and Echocardiographic Results of Mitral Valve Repair for Degenerative Disease [Résultats cliniques et échocardiographiques à long terme pour la réparation de la valve mitrale dégénérative] at the 59th Meeting of the Société Française de Chirurgie Thoracique et Cardio-Vasculaire, 2006, Bordeaux, France.

Abstract

Abstract Background and aim of the study: Mitral valve repair is the procedure of choice for severe degenerative mitral regurgitation (MR). The objective of this study was to review prospectively gathered echocardiographic and clinical results with mitral valve repair for degenerative disease. Methods: Between May 1995 and July 2004, 403 patients underwent mitral valve repair for degenerative disease (mean age 63 ± 12 years, 72% males). Concomitant procedures included CABG (29%), radiofrequency left-sided maze procedure (8%), aortic valve replacement (6%), and tricuspid valve repair (4%). Results: Thirty-day mortality was 0.4% for patients with isolated mitral valve repair and 5.1% for patients with mitral valve repair and concomitant procedure (p = 0.003). Five-year survival was higher for isolated mitral valve repair compared to mitral valve repair with a combined procedure (92 ± 2% vs. 76 ± 5%; p < 0.001). Pulmonary artery pressure and left atrial and left ventricular end-diastolic diameters were significantly improved following mitral valve repair (all p ≤ 0.005) and this was sustained afterward. The freedom from severe (3+ or 4+) and moderate-severe (2+, 3+, or 4+) MR was 95% and 77% at 5 years, respectively, whereas the freedom from reoperation was 96 ± 1% at 5 years. Significant predictors of moderate-severe MR recurrence were cardiac dilatation, anterior leaflet prolapse, and concomitant procedure, whereas mitral valve disease amenable to posterior leaflet resection had a lower risk of MR recurrence. Conclusions: Excellent clinical outcomes can be obtained using standard techniques of mitral valve repair of the degenerative valve. MR recurrence is low but nonnegligible, emphasizing the necessity for long-term postoperative echocardiographic follow-up in these patients. (J Card Surg 2010;25:9-15)

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