4.7 Article

Diabetes mellitus in transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation: a propensity matched analysis

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR DIABETOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12933-022-01654-x

Keywords

Aortic valve stenosis; Transcatheter aortic valve replacement; TAVI; Diabetes mellitus; Insulin; Mortality; Stroke; Bleeding

Funding

  1. Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative: the Dutch Heart Foundation [CVON 2018-28, 2012-06]
  2. Dutch Federation of University Medical Centres
  3. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development
  4. Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences
  5. Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study evaluated clinical outcomes in diabetic patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). The results showed that diabetic patients had comparable mortality rates and other adverse clinical outcomes to non-diabetic patients. This indicates the safety of TAVI treatment in diabetic patients.
Background Diabetes Mellitus (DM) affects a third of patients with symptomatic severe aortic valve stenosis undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). DM is a well-known risk factor for cardiac surgery, but its prognostic impact in TAVI patients remains controversial. This study aimed to evaluate outcomes in diabetic patients undergoing TAVI. Methods This multicentre registry includes data of > 12,000 patients undergoing transfemoral TAVI. We assessed baseline patient characteristics and clinical outcomes in patients with DM and without DM. Clinical outcomes were defined by the second valve academic research consortium. Propensity score matching was applied to minimize potential confounding. Results Of the 11,440 patients included, 31% (n = 3550) had DM and 69% (n = 7890) did not have DM. Diabetic patients were younger but had an overall worse cardiovascular risk profile than non-diabetic patients. All-cause mortality rates were comparable at 30 days (4.5% vs. 4.9%, RR 0.9, 95%CI 0.8-1.1, p = 0.43) and at one year (17.5% vs. 17.4%, RR 1.0, 95%CI 0.9-1.1, p = 0.86) in the unmatched population. Propensity score matching obtained 3281 patient-pairs. Also in the matched population, mortality rates were comparable at 30 days (4.7% vs. 4.3%, RR 1.1, 95%CI 0.9-1.4, p = 0.38) and one year (17.3% vs. 16.2%, RR 1.1, 95%CI 0.9-1.2, p = 0.37). Other clinical outcomes including stroke, major bleeding, myocardial infarction and permanent pacemaker implantation, were comparable between patients with DM and without DM. Insulin treated diabetics (n = 314) showed a trend to higher mortality compared with non-insulin treated diabetics (n = 701, Hazard Ratio 1.5, 95%CI 0.9-2.3, p = 0.08). EuroSCORE II was the most accurate risk score and underestimated 30-day mortality with an observed-expected ratio of 1.15 in DM patients, STS-PROM overestimated actual mortality with a ratio of 0.77 and Logistic EuroSCORE with 0.35. Conclusion DM was not associated with mortality during the first year after TAVI. DM patients undergoing TAVI had low rates of mortality and other adverse clinical outcomes, comparable to non-DM TAVI patients. Our results underscore the safety of TAVI treatment in DM patients.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available