Serum lipoprotein(a) and bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration

Author:

Botezatu Simona B12,Tzolos Evangelos1,Kaiser Yannick3,Cartlidge Timothy R G1,Kwiecinski Jacek4,Barton Anna K1,Yu Xinming1,Williams Michelle C1,van Beek Edwin J R5,White Audrey1,Kroon Jeffrey6ORCID,Slomka Piotr J7,Popescu Bogdan A28,Newby David E1ORCID,Stroes Erik S G3ORCID,Zheng Kang H3,Dweck Marc R1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. British Heart Foundation Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh , Chancellor's Building, Little France Crescent, EH16 4SB, Edinburgh , UK

2. University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Carol Davila”, Cardiology Department , Euroecolab, 258 Fundeni Road, District 2, 022238, Bucharest , Romania

3. Department of Vascular Medicine, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam , Meibergdreef 9, 1105, Amsterdam , the Netherlands

4. Department of Interventional Cardiology and Angiology, Institute of Cardiology , Alpejska 42 04-628, Warsaw , Poland

5. Edinburgh Imaging, Queen's Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh , 47 Little France Crescent, EH16 4TJ, Edinburgh , UK

6. Department of Experimental Vascular Medicine, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam , Meibergdreef 9, 1105, Amsterdam , The Netherlands

7. Division of Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Department of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center , 8700 Beverly Blvd, CA 90048 Los Angeles, California , USA

8. Emergency Institute for Cardiovascular Diseases “Prof. Dr. C. C. Iliescu”, Cardiology Department , 258 Fundeni Road, District 2, 022238, Bucharest , Romania

Abstract

Abstract Aims Bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration demonstrates pathological similarities to aortic stenosis. Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] is a well-recognized risk factor for incident aortic stenosis and disease progression. The aim of this study is to investigate whether serum Lp(a) concentrations are associated with bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration. Methods and results In a post hoc analysis of a prospective multimodality imaging study (NCT02304276), serum Lp(a) concentrations, echocardiography, contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) angiography, and 18F-sodium fluoride (18F-NaF) positron emission tomography (PET) were assessed in patients with bioprosthetic aortic valves. Patients were also followed up for 2 years with serial echocardiography. Serum Lp(a) concentrations [median 19.9 (8.4–76.4) mg/dL] were available in 97 participants (mean age 75 ± 7 years, 54% men). There were no baseline differences across the tertiles of serum Lp(a) concentrations for disease severity assessed by echocardiography [median peak aortic valve velocity: highest tertile 2.5 (2.3–2.9) m/s vs. lower tertiles 2.7 (2.4–3.0) m/s, P = 0.204], or valve degeneration on CT angiography (highest tertile n = 8 vs. lower tertiles n = 12, P = 0.552) and 18F-NaF PET (median tissue-to-background ratio: highest tertile 1.13 (1.05–1.41) vs. lower tertiles 1.17 (1.06–1.53), P = 0.889]. After 2 years of follow-up, there were no differences in annualized change in bioprosthetic hemodynamic progression [change in peak aortic valve velocity: highest tertile [0.0 (−0.1–0.2) m/s/year vs. lower tertiles 0.1 (0.0–0.2) m/s/year, P = 0.528] or the development of structural valve degeneration. Conclusion Serum lipoprotein(a) concentrations do not appear to be a major determinant or mediator of bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration.

Funder

The Edinburgh Clinical Research Facilities

Edinburgh Imaging facility

National Health Service Research Scotland

National Health Service Lothian Health Board

Romanian Society of Cardiology Research

University of Edinburgh Centre of Research Excellence Award

British Heart Foundation

Scottish Imaging Network

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research

Dutch Heart Foundation

Wellcome Trust

Sir Jules Thorn Award

Biomedical Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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