Post-infarction ventricular septal defect: percutaneous or surgical management in the UK national registry.
Author
Giblett, Joel PMatetic, Andrija
Jenkins, David
Ng, Choo Y
Venuraju, Shreenidhi
MacCarthy, Tobias
Vibhishanan, Jonathan
O'Neill, John P
Kirmani, Bilal H
Pullan, D Mark
Stables, Rod H
Andrews, Jack
Buttinger, Nicolas
Kim, Wan Cheol
Kanyal, Ritesh
Butler, Megan A
Butler, Robert
George, Sudhakar
Khurana, Ayush
Crossland, David S
Marczak, Jakub
Smith, William H T
Thomson, John D R
Bentham, James R
Clapp, Brian R
Buch, Mamta
Hayes, Nicholas
Byrne, Jonathan
MacCarthy, Philip
Aggarwal, Suneil K
Shapiro, Leonard M
Turner, Mark S
de Giovanni, Joe
Northridge, David B
Hildick-Smith, David
Mamas, Mamas A
Calvert, Patrick A
Publication date
2022-12-21Subject
Surgery
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aims: Post-infarction ventricular septal defect (PIVSD) is a mechanical complication of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) with a poor prognosis. Surgical repair is the mainstay of treatment, although percutaneous closure is increasingly undertaken. Methods and resuts: Patients treated with surgical or percutaneous repair of PIVSD (2010-2021) were identified at 16 UK centres. Case note review was undertaken. The primary outcome was long-term mortality. Patient groups were allocated based upon initial management (percutaneous or surgical). Three-hundred sixty-two patients received 416 procedures (131 percutaneous, 231 surgery). 16.1% of percutaneous patients subsequently had surgery. 7.8% of surgical patients subsequently had percutaneous treatment. Times from AMI to treatment were similar [percutaneous 9 (6-14) vs. surgical 9 (4-22) days, P = 0.18]. Surgical patients were more likely to have cardiogenic shock (62.8% vs. 51.9%, P = 0.044). Percutaneous patients were substantially older [72 (64-77) vs. 67 (61-73) years, P < 0.001] and more likely to be discussed in a heart team setting. There was no difference in long-term mortality between patients (61.1% vs. 53.7%, P = 0.17). In-hospital mortality was lower in the surgical group (55.0% vs. 44.2%, P = 0.048) with no difference in mortality after hospital discharge (P = 0.65). Cardiogenic shock [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) 1.97 (95% confidence interval 1.37-2.84), P < 0.001), percutaneous approach [aHR 1.44 (1.01-2.05), P = 0.042], and number of vessels with coronary artery disease [aHR 1.22 (1.01-1.47), P = 0.043] were independently associated with long-term mortality. Conclusion: Surgical and percutaneous repair are viable options for management of PIVSD. There was no difference in post-discharge long-term mortality between patients, although in-hospital mortality was lower for surgery.Citation
Giblett JP, Matetic A, Jenkins D, Ng CY, Venuraju S, MacCarthy T, Vibhishanan J, O'Neill JP, Kirmani BH, Pullan DM, Stables RH, Andrews J, Buttinger N, Kim WC, Kanyal R, Butler MA, Butler R, George S, Khurana A, Crossland DS, Marczak J, Smith WHT, Thomson JDR, Bentham JR, Clapp BR, Buch M, Hayes N, Byrne J, MacCarthy P, Aggarwal SK, Shapiro LM, Turner MS, de Giovanni J, Northridge DB, Hildick-Smith D, Mamas MA, Calvert PA. Post-infarction ventricular septal defect: percutaneous or surgical management in the UK national registry. Eur Heart J. 2022 Dec 21;43(48):5020-5032. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac511Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://academic.oup.com/eurheartjPMID
36124729Journal
European Heart JournalPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/eurheartj/ehac511