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  • Title: Trends in mitral valve surgery: a single practice experience.
    Author: Rankin JS, Burrichter CA, Walton-Shirley MK, Whiteside JH, Teague SM, McLaughlin VW, Sharma MK, Johnston TS, McRae AT, Myers PR.
    Journal: J Heart Valve Dis; 2009 Jul; 18(4):359-66. PubMed ID: 19852138.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: Mitral repair has evolved to a point where three methods can be used to address most pathologies: full ring annuloplasty (RA) for annular disease; Gore-Tex artificial chordal replacement (ACR) for chordal disease; and autologous pericardial augmentation (PA) for leaflet disease. The study aim was to assess the impact of the increasing application of these methods on operative results over time. METHODS: Of 328 consecutive mitral valve procedures, 34% involved myxomatous prolapse, 23% rheumatic, 13% ischemic, 12% pure annular dilatation, 7% prosthetic dysfunction, 6% endocarditis, 3% hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM), and 2% 'other'. All patients underwent RA. Myxomatous prolapse was repaired with ACR, and ischemic and annular dilatation with RA alone. Rheumatic, endocarditis, and HOCM etiologies were repaired with all three methods. Patients were allocated to two-year increments, and also to repair versus replacement groups. Operative outcomes over time were assessed with linear and binomial regression. RESULTS: Overall, 66% of mitral valves were repaired; the average operative mortality was 6% (2% for repair, 7% for replacement), and 18% involved multiple valve procedures (mortality 16%). The extent of repair increased over time, from 55% to 100% of all etiologies. Over the same period, operative mortality fell from 6% in 1994 to 0% over the past six years. Other variables, such as age, presentation status, left ventricular dysfunction and etiology were relatively constant over the period. Reoperation rates after repair have been only 2% over the past 10 years of follow up. CONCLUSION: With recent innovations, most mitral disease can be repaired with combinations of RA, ACR and PA. Today, operative mortality is approaching zero, and one factor may be the increasing application of repair to all mitral pathologies. These data support the trend of expanding valve repair across most mitral disorders.
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