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Survival benefit of overweight patients undergoing MitraClip® procedure in comparison to normal‐weight patients
Author(s) -
Keller Karsten,
Geyer Martin,
Hobohm Lukas,
Tamm Alexander R.,
Kreidel Felix,
Ruf Tobias F.,
Hell Michaela,
Schmitt Volker H.,
Bachmann Kevin,
Born Sonja,
Schulz Eberhard,
Münzel Thomas,
Bardeleben Ralph S.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
clinical cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.263
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-8737
pISSN - 0160-9289
DOI - 10.1002/clc.23897
Subject(s) - medicine , mitraclip , hazard ratio , underweight , overweight , confidence interval , gastroenterology , obesity , body mass index , surgery , mitral regurgitation
Background The number of MitraClip® implantations increased significantly in recent years. Data regarding the impact of weight class on survival are sparse. Hypothesis We hypothesized that weight class influences survival of patients treated with MitraClip® implantation. Methods We investigated in‐hospital, 1‐year, 3‐year, and long‐term survival of patients successfully treated with isolated MitraClip® implantation for mitral valve regurgitation (MR) (June 2010–March 2018). Patients were categorized by weight classes, and the impact of weight classes on survival was analyzed. Results Of 617 patients (aged 79.2 years; 47.3% females) treated with MitraClip® implantation (June 2010–March 2018), 12 patients were underweight (2.2%), 220 normal weight (40.1%), 237 overweight (43.2%), and 64 obesity class I (11.7%), 12 class II (2.2%), and 4 class III (0.7%). Preprocedural Logistic EuroScore (21.1 points [IQR 14.0–37.1]; 26.0 [18.5–38.5]; 26.0 [18.4–39.9]; 24.8 [16.8–33.8]; 33.0 [25.9–49.2]; 31.6 [13.1–47.6]; p  = .291) was comparable between groups. Weight class had no impact on in‐hospital death (0.0%; 4.1%; 1.5%; 0.0%; 7.7%; 0.0%; p  = .189), 1‐year survival (75.0%; 72.0%; 76.9%; 75.0%; 75.0%; 33.3%; p  = .542), and 3‐year survival (40.0%; 36.8%; 38.2%; 48.6%; 20.0%; 33.3%; p  = .661). Compared to normal weight, underweight (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.35 [95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.65–2.79], p  = .419), obesity‐class I (HR: 0.93 [95% CI: 0.65–1.34], p  = .705), class II (HR: 0.39 [95% CI: 0.12–1.24], p  = .112), and class III (HR: 1.28 [95% CI: 0.32–5.21], p  = .726) did not affect long‐term survival. In contrast, overweight was associated with better survival (HR: 1.32 [95% CI: 1.04–1.68], p  = .023). Conclusion Overweight affected the long‐term survival of patients undergoing MitraClip® implantation beneficially compared to normal weight.

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