Medline ® Abstract for Reference 47
of 'Complications of prosthetic heart valves'
47
TI
Allograft aortic valve replacement: long-term follow-up.
AU
O'Brien MF, Stafford EG, Gardner MA, Pohlner PG, Tesar PJ, Cochrane AD, Mau TK, Gall KL, Smith SE
SO
Ann Thorac Surg. 1995;60(2 Suppl):S65.
Aortic valve replacement using an allograft aortic valve has been performed on 804 patients. From December 1969 to May 1975, 124 patients received a nonviable allograft valve sterilized by incubation with low-dose antibiotics and stored for weeks by refrigeration at 4 degrees C (series 1). From June 1975 to January 1994, 680 patients received viable allograft valves, now cryopreserved early within 2 hours of collection from transplant recipient donors, 6 hours for multiorgan donor valves and 23 hours (mean) for autopsy valves from donor death. The 30-day mortality was 8.9% +/- 5% (95% confidence limits) for series I and 2.8% +/- 1% (95% confidence limits) for series II. Actuarial patient survival including hospital mortality at 15 years was 56% +/- 5% for series I and 62% +/- 5% for series II. The probability of a thromboembolic event was low, freedom at 15 years being 95% +/- 1% for patients receiving allografts with or without associated coronary bypass procedures and 81% +/- 5% for patients having allografts with other associated procedures (eg, mitral valve operations). Actuarial freedom from endocarditis was similar for the two series, 91% +/- 3% (series I) and 94% +/- 2% (series II) at 15 years. The freedom from valve incompetence, from reoperation for all causes, and from structural deterioration demonstrated clearly the inferiority of the 4 degrees C stored allograft valves. For structural deterioration as identified clinically, at reoperation and at death, freedom from this event at 15 years was 45% +/- 6% for series I and 80% +/- 5% for series II (p value for the difference is 0).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
AD
Department of Cardiac Surgery, Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.
PMID
