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Outcomes of transcatheter aortic valve replacement in patients with chronic liver disease
Author(s) -
Shah Anoop M.,
Ogbara Jeffrey,
Herrmann Howard C.,
Fox Zachary,
Kadakia Mitul,
Anwaruddin Saif,
Bavaria Joseph E.,
Desai Nimesh D.,
Jagasia Dinesh,
Szeto Wilson Y.,
Li Robert H.,
Vallabhajosyula Prashanth,
Giri Jay
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
catheterization and cardiovascular interventions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.988
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1522-726X
pISSN - 1522-1946
DOI - 10.1002/ccd.25994
Subject(s) - medicine , valve replacement , perioperative , stenosis , chronic liver disease , surgery , liver disease , liver biopsy , cardiology , aortic valve stenosis , cirrhosis , biopsy
Objective Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has emerged as an alternative to high‐risk surgery in patients with comorbid conditions. The role of TAVR in patients with liver disease has not been examined. Methods We examined the procedural and intermediate to long‐term follow‐up outcomes of patients with severe symptomatic aortic valve stenosis and chronic liver disease, identified by liver biopsy or from a combination of clinical findings. All patients were treated with balloon‐expandable transfemoral (TF) or transapical (TA) TAVR between November 2007 and February 2014. Results A total of 17 of 706 (2.41%) patients treated at our institution with TF [ n  = 14] or TA [ n  = 3] TAVR had chronic liver disease (mean age 77.65 ± 9.06 years, 7 women, mean STS score 8.37, mean Charlson score 5.00, mean MELD score 11.35, Child–Turcotte–Pugh (CTP) Class A [ n  = 11], B [ n  = 6], C [ n  = 0], biopsy proven liver disease [ n  = 5]). Median follow‐up was 466 days (range = 12–1,403 days). The mean post‐procedure length of hospital stay was 5.88 ± 3.08 days. Procedural success was achieved in all cases. In‐hospital mortality was 5.88% and 90‐day mortality was 17.65%. Safety and efficacy endpoints as defined by the valve academic research consortium (VARC) were significant for one perioperative death from a proximate cardiac cause (post‐operative day 14), one death after hospital discharge of unknown cause (post‐operative day 12), two late deaths from non‐cardiac causes (post‐operative days 50 and 487, respectively), and one late death of unknown cause (post‐operative day 1,005). There were no life‐threatening or major bleeding complications. One patient had an MI, one had a transient ischemic attack, four had transient, Stage I, acute kidney injury and one had transient, Stage II, acute kidney injury. Conclusion TF and TA TAVR are feasible methods for treating aortic stenosis in patients with chronic liver disease. In patients with mild to moderate chronic liver disease there are acceptable rates of early and late complications, however, outcomes in patients with advanced liver disease (MELD >20 or CTP class C) warrant further study. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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