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Dagenais, François

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Dagenais

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François

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Université Laval. Département de chirurgie

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ncf10831090

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  • PublicationRestreint
    Rate, timing, correlates, and outcomes of hemodynamic valve deterioration after bioprosthetic surgical aortic valve replacement
    (American Heart Association, 2018-08-13) Mahjoub, Haïfa; Rodés-Cabau, Josep; Kalavrouziotis, Dimitri; Voisine, Pierre; Mohammadi, Siamak; Côté, Nancy; Yanagawa, Bobby; Girerd, Nicolas; Pibarot, Philippe; Juni, Peter; Clavel, Marie-Annick; Verma, Subodh; Puri, Rishi; Dagenais, François; Mathieu, Patrick; Salaun, Erwan
    Background: The incidence of structural valve deterioration after bioprosthesis (BP) aortic valve replacement (AVR) established on the basis of reoperation may substantially underestimate the true incidence. The objective is to determine the rate, timing, correlates, and association between hemodynamic valve deterioration (HVD) and outcomes assessed by Doppler echocardiography after surgical BP AVR. Methods: A total of 1387 patients (62.2% male, 70.5±7.8 years of age) who underwent BP AVR were included in this retrospective study. Baseline echocardiography was performed at a median time of 4.1 (1.3–6.5) months after AVR. All patients had an echocardiographic follow-up ≥2 years after AVR (926 at least 5 years and 385 at least 10 years). HVD was defined by Doppler assessment as a ≥10 mm Hg increase in mean gradient or worsening of transprosthetic regurgitation ≥1/3 class. HVD was classified according to the timing after AVR: “very early,” during the first 2-years; “early,” between 2 and 5 years; “midterm,” between 5 and 10 years; and “long-term,” >10 years. Results: A total of 428 patients (30.9%) developed HVD. Among these patients, 52 (12.0%) were classified as “very early,” 129 (30.1%) as “early,” 158 (36.9%) as “midterm,” and 89 (20.8%) as “long-term” HVD. Factors independently associated with HVD occurring within the first 5 years after AVR were diabetes mellitus (P=0.01), active smoking (P=0.01), renal insufficiency (P=0.01), baseline postoperative mean gradient ≥15 mm Hg (P=0.04) or transprosthetic regurgitation ≥mild (P=0.04), and type of BP (stented versus stentless, P=0.003). Factors associated with HVD occurring after the fifth year after AVR were female sex (P=0.03), warfarin use (P=0.007), and BP type (P<0.001). HVD was independently associated with mortality (hazard ratio, 2.18; 95% CI, 1.86–2.57; P<0.001). Conclusions: HVD as identified by Doppler echocardiography occurred in one third of patients and was associated with a 2.2-fold higher adjusted mortality. Diabetes mellitus and renal insufficiency were associated with early HVD, whereas female sex, warfarin use, and stented BPs (versus stentless) were associated with late HVD.
  • PublicationAccès libre
    Transvalvular flow, sex, and survival after valve replacement surgery in patients with severe aortic stenosis
    (Elsevier, 2020-04-28) Bilodeau, Anthony; Guzzetti, Ezequiel; Kalavrouziotis, Dimitri; Zhang, Bin; Couture, Christian; Annabi, Mohamed Salah; Pibarot, Philippe; Clavel, Marie-Annick; Dagenais, François
    Background : The respective impacts of transvalvular flow, gradient, sex, and their interactions on mortality in patients with severe aortic stenosis undergoing surgical aortic valve replacement (AVR) are unknown. Objectives : This study sought to compare the impact of pre-operative flow-gradient patterns on mortality after AVR and to examine whether there are sex differences. Methods : This study analyzed clinical, echocardiographic, and outcome data prospectively collected in 1,490 patients (544 women [37%]), with severe aortic stenosis and preserved left ventricular ejection fraction who underwent AVR. Results : In this cohort, 601 patients (40%) had normal flow (NF) with high gradient (HG), 405 (27%) NF with low gradient (LG), 246 (17%) paradoxical low flow (LF)/HG, and 238 (16%) LF/LG. During a median follow-up of 2.42 years (interquartile range: 1.04 to 4.29 years), 167 patients died. Patients with LF/HG exhibited the highest mortality after AVR (hazard ratio [HR]: 2.01; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.33 to 3.03; p < 0.01), which remained significant after multivariate adjustment (HR: 1.96; 95% CI: 1.29 to 2.98; p < 0.01). Both LF/LG and NF/LG patients had comparable outcome to NF/HG (p ≥ 0.47). Optimal thresholds of stroke volume index were obtained for men (40 ml/m2) and women (32 ml/m2). Using these sex-specific cutpoints, paradoxical LF was independently associated with increased mortality in both women (adjusted HR: 2.05; 95% CI: 1.21 to 3.47; p < 0.01) and men (adjusted HR: 1.54; 95% CI: 1.02 to 2.32; p = 0.042), whereas guidelines’ threshold (35 ml/m2) does not. Conclusions : Paradoxical LF/HG was associated with higher mortality following AVR, suggesting that a reduced flow is a marker of disease severity even in patients with HG aortic stenosis. Early surgical AVR (i.e., before gradient attains 40 mm Hg) might be preferable in these patients. Furthermore, the use of sex-specific thresholds (<40 ml/m2 for men and <32 ml/m2 for women) to define low-flow outperforms the guidelines’ threshold of 35 ml/m2 in risk stratification after AVR.
  • PublicationAccès libre
    Sex-related discordance between aortic valve calcification and hemodynamic severity of aortic stenosis : is valvular fibrosis the explanation?
    (Grune & Stratton, 2016-11-22) Trahan, Sylvain; Couture, Christian; Mohammadi, Siamak; Côté, Nancy; Joubert, Philippe; Bossé, Yohan; Clavel, Marie-Annick; Pagé, Sylvain; Dagenais, François; Mathieu, Patrick; Simard, Louis
    Rationale: Calcific aortic stenosis (AS) is characterized by calcium deposition in valve leaflets. However, women present lower aortic valve calcification (AVC) loads than men for the same AS hemodynamic severity. Objective: We thus aimed to assess sex-differences in aortic valve fibro-calcific remodelling. Methods and Results: One hundred and twenty-five patients underwent Doppler-echocardiography and multidetector-computed-tomography within 3 months prior to aortic valve replacement. Explanted stenotic tricuspid aortic valves were weighed and fibrosis degree was determined. Sixty-four men and 39 women were frequency-matched for age, body mass index (BMI), hypertension, renal disease, diabetes, and AS severity. Mean age was 75±9years, mean gradient (41±18mmHg) and indexed aortic valve area (0.41±0.12cm2/m2) were similar between men and women (all p=0.18). Median AVC (1973[1124-3490]AU) and mean valve weight (2.36±0.99g) were lower in women compared to men (both p<0.0001). AVC density correlated better with valve weight in men (r2=0.57; p<0.0001) than in women (r2=0.26; p=0.0008). After adjustment for age, BMI, AVC density and aortic annulus diameter, female sex was an independent risk factor for higher fibrosis score in AS valves (p=0.003). Picrosirius red staining of explanted valves showed greater amount of collagen fibers (p=0.01) and Masson's trichrome staining revealed a greater proportion of dense connective tissue (p=0.02) in women compared to men. Conclusions: In this series with tricuspid aortic valve and similar AS severity, women have less valvular calcification but more fibrosis compared to men. These findings suggest that the pathophysiology of the disease and thus potential targets for drug development may be different according to sex.