The intact porcine bioprosthesis: early world-wide clinical experience and analysis of a single institution's experience

F. Vermeulen(St. Antonius Ziekenhuis), Gerardus Bennink(St. Antonius Ziekenhuis), S. Ernst(St. Antonius Ziekenhuis), W. Jaarsma(St. Antonius Ziekenhuis), P. A. Chevalier(Medtronic (United States)), Doris Lutz(Medtronic (United States))
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
January 1, 1992
Cited by 11

Abstract

The Intact porcine bioprosthesis is a new-generation valve fixed under stress-free conditions and subjected to a mineralization-inhibiting treatment. The valve is undergoing multi-centre prospective clinical evaluation sponsored by Medtronic, Inc., with 19 centres participating world wide. Since April 1986, 1465 valves have been implanted in the aortic position (AVR, n = 965), mitral position (MVR, n = 438), or both (n = 62), and followed up to 5 years. The data recorded at our participating centre, with 115 valves implanted (AVR n = 93, MVR n = 22) closely match the overall event and death rates in the prospective study. Early mortality in the overall study is 5.6% in AVR and 6.6% in MVR; 3-year actuarial survival rates are 88.5% in AVR and 85.6% in MVR; structural valve-failure-free rates at 3 years are 99.8% in AVR and 98.5% in MVR; 3-year freedom from valve-related reoperation is 97.3% in AVR and 95.8% in MVR. The preferential use of bioprosthetic valves in patients aged 70 years and older with no other indication for anticoagulant treatment entails the not infrequent occurrence of patient/prosthesis mismatch in AVR. Hence, when implanting bioprostheses in old patients, the acceptance of some mismatch has to be weighed against the freedom from anticoagulation treatment and the expected long-term freedom from structural valve failure. Further long-term follow-up will be required to demonstrate the greater durability expected from the stress-free fixation and the anti-mineralization treatment.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis