Clinical Outcomes after Multivalve Surgery in Octogenarians: Evaluating the Need for a Paradigm Shift

Author:

Taghizadeh-Waghefi Ali12ORCID,Petrov Asen12ORCID,Arzt Sebastian12,Alexiou Konstantin12,Tugtekin Sems-Malte12,Matschke Klaus12,Kappert Utz12,Wilbring Manuel12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Faculty “Carl Gustav Carus”, Technical University of Dresden, 01307 Dresden, Germany

2. Center of Minimally Invasive Cardiac Surgery, University Heart Center Dresden, Medical Faculty of the Technical University of Dresden, 01037 Dresden, Germany

Abstract

(1) Background: this study addresses the lack of comprehensive research on outcomes in octogenarians undergoing cardiac surgery for multivalvular disease, emphasizing the need for a critical examination of the intervention’s overall worth in this aging population. (2) Methods: By analyzing short-term and mid-term data from 101 consecutive octogenarian patients undergoing multivalve surgery, the study identifies predictors for in-hospital and one-year mortality. (3) Results: In-hospital mortality increased fourfold with the occurrence of at least one postoperative complication. Octogenarians undergoing multivalve surgery experienced an in-hospital mortality rate of 13.9% and an overall one-year mortality rate of 43.8%. Postoperative delirium was identified as an independent risk factor, contributing to elevated risks of both in-hospital and one-year mortality. Prolonged surgical procedure time emerged as an independent risk factor associated with increased in-hospital mortality. Continuous veno-venous hemodialysis showed an independent impact on in-hospital mortality. Both re-intubation and the transfusion of packed red blood cells were identified as independent risk factors for one-year mortality. (4) Conclusions: This study urges a critical examination of the justification for multivalve surgeries in high-risk elderly patients, emphasizing a paradigm shift. It advocates for interdisciplinary collaboration and innovative strategies, such as staged hybrid procedures, to improve therapeutic approaches for this challenging patient group to achieve a better therapeutic outcome for these patients.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference31 articles.

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2. German Heart Surgery Report 2021: The Annual Updated Registry of the German Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery;Beckmann;Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg.,2022

3. Rodgers, J.L., Jones, J., Bolleddu, S.I., Vanthenapalli, S., Rodgers, L.E., Shah, K., Karia, K., and Panguluri, S.K. (2019). Cardiovascular Risks Associated with Gender and Aging. J. Cardiovasc. Dev. Dis., 6.

4. Pathophysiology and management of multivalvular disease;Unger;Nat. Rev. Cardiol.,2016

5. Burden of valvular heart diseases: A population-based study;Nkomo;Lancet,2006

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