Association Between Early Surgical Intervention vs Watchful Waiting and Outcomes for Mitral Regurgitation Due to Flail Mitral Valve Leaflets

IMPORTANCE The optimal management of severe mitral valve regurgitation in patients without class I triggers (heart failure symptoms or left ventricular dysfunction) remains controversial in part due to the poorly defined long-term consequences of current management strategies. In the absence of clin...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2013-08, Vol.310 (6), p.609-616
Hauptverfasser: Suri, Rakesh M, Vanoverschelde, Jean-Louis, Grigioni, Francesco, Schaff, Hartzell V, Tribouilloy, Christophe, Avierinos, Jean-Francois, Barbieri, Andrea, Pasquet, Agnes, Huebner, Marianne, Rusinaru, Dan, Russo, Antonio, Michelena, Hector I, Enriquez-Sarano, Maurice
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IMPORTANCE The optimal management of severe mitral valve regurgitation in patients without class I triggers (heart failure symptoms or left ventricular dysfunction) remains controversial in part due to the poorly defined long-term consequences of current management strategies. In the absence of clinical trial data, analysis of large multicenter registries is critical. OBJECTIVE To ascertain the comparative effectiveness of initial medical management (nonsurgical observation) vs early mitral valve surgery following the diagnosis of mitral regurgitation due to flail leaflets. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS The Mitral Regurgitation International Database (MIDA) registry includes 2097 consecutive patients with flail mitral valve regurgitation (1980-2004) receiving routine cardiac care from 6 tertiary centers (France, Italy, Belgium, and the United States). Mean follow-up was 10.3 years and was 98% complete. Of 1021 patients with mitral regurgitation without the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA) guideline class I triggers, 575 patients were initially medically managed and 446 underwent mitral valve surgery within 3 months following detection. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Association between treatment strategy and survival, heart failure, and new-onset atrial fibrillation. RESULTS There was no significant difference in early mortality (1.1% for early surgery vs 0.5% for medical management, P=.28) and new-onset heart failure rates (0.9% for early surgery vs 0.9% for medical management, P=.96) between treatment strategies at 3 months. In contrast, long-term survival rates were higher for patients with early surgery (86% vs 69% at 10 years, P 
ISSN:0098-7484
1538-3598
DOI:10.1001/jama.2013.8643