4.5 Article

Cerebral oxygen saturation as outcome predictor after transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation

Journal

CLINICAL RESEARCH IN CARDIOLOGY
Volume 111, Issue 8, Pages 955-965

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00392-022-02019-w

Keywords

Valvular cardiomyopathy; Aortic stenosis; Cerebral oxygen saturation; TAVI

Funding

  1. Abbott
  2. KelCon
  3. Medos
  4. Novartis
  5. Cardiopulmonary Institute (CPI)
  6. German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK)
  7. European Union [101015930, 101045956]

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This study showed that low baseline ScO2 not responding to oxygen supply might indicate impaired cardiopulmonary function and is associated with worse 1 year survival and prolonged in-hospital stay after transfemoral TAVI.
Background Cerebral oxygen saturation (ScO2) can be measured non-invasively by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and correlates with cerebral perfusion. We investigated cerebral saturation during transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) and its impact on outcome. Methods and results Cerebral oxygenation was measured continuously by NIRS in 173 analgo-sedated patients during transfemoral TAVI (female 47%, mean age 81 years) with self-expanding (39%) and balloon-expanding valves (61%). We investigated the periprocedural dynamics of cerebral oxygenation. Mean ScO2 at baseline without oxygen supply was 60%. During rapid ventricular pacing, ScO2 dropped significantly (before 64% vs. after 55%, p <0.001). ScO2 at baseline correlated positively with baseline left-ventricular ejection fraction (0.230, p < 0.006) and hemoglobin (0.327, p < 0.001), and inversely with EuroSCORE-II ( - 0.285, p < 0.001) and length of in-hospital stay ( - 0.229, p < 0.01). Patients with ScO2 <56% despite oxygen supply at baseline had impaired 1 year survival (log-rank test p < 0.01) and prolonged in-hospital stay (p = 0.03). Furthermore, baseline ScO2 was found to be a predictor for 1 year survival independent of age and sex (multivariable adjusted Cox regression, p = 0.020, hazard ratio (HR 0.94, 95% CI 0.90-0.99) and independent of overall perioperative risk estimated by EuroSCORE-II and hemoglobin (p = 0.03, HR 0.95, 95% CI 0.91-0.99). Conclusions Low baseline ScO2 not responding to oxygen supply might act as a surrogate for impaired cardiopulmonary function and is associated with worse 1 year survival and prolonged in-hospital stay after transfemoral TAVI. ScO2 monitoring is an easy to implement diagnostic tool to screen patients at risk with a potential preserved recovery and worse outcome after TAVI. [GRAPHICS] .

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