Litcius/Paper detail

TAVI-CT score to evaluate the anatomic risk in patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation

Nicola Corcione, Alberto Morello, Paolo Ferraro, Michele Cimmino, Michele Albanese, Martino Pepe, Palma Luisa Nestola, Salvatore Giordano, Luca Bardi, Giuseppe Biondi‐Zoccai, Arturo Giordano

2022Scientific Reports17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) requires thorough preprocedural planning with non-invasive imaging, including computed tomography (CT). The plethora of details obtained with thoraco-abdominal CT represents a challenge for accurate and synthetic decision-making. We devised and tested a comprehensive score suitable to summarize CT exams when planning TAVI. An original comprehensive scoring system (TAVI-CT score) was devised, including details on cardiac, aortic, iliac and femoral artery features. The score was applied to a prospectively collected series of patients undergoing TAVI at our institution, driving decision making on access and prosthesis choice. Different TAVI-CT score groups were compared in terms of procedural success, acute complications, and early clinical outcomes. We included a total of 200 undergoing TAVI between February 2020 and May 2021, with 74 (37.0%) having a low (0-2) TAVI-CT score, 50 (25.0%) having a moderate (3) TAVI-CT score, and 76 (38.0%) having a high (≥ 4) TAVI-CT score. Male gender was the only non-CT variable significantly associated with the TAVI-CT score (p = 0.001). As expected, access choice differed significantly across TAVI-CT scores (p = 0.009), as was device choice, with Portico more favored and Allegra less favored in the highest TAVI-CT score group (p = 0.036). Acute outcomes were similar in the 3 groups, including device and procedural success rates (respectively p = 0.717 and p = 1). One-month follow-up showed similar rates of death, myocardial infarction, stroke, and bleeding, as well as of a composite safety endpoint (all p > 0.05). However, vascular complications were significantly more common in the highest TAVI-CT score group (p = 0.041). The TAVI-CT score is a simple scoring system that could be routinely applied to CT imaging for TAVI planning, if the present hypothesis-generating findings are confirmed in larger prospective studies.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRadiologyMyocardial infarctionComputed tomographyFramingham Risk ScoreAortic valveCardiologySurgeryInternal medicineDiseaseCardiac Valve Diseases and TreatmentsInfective Endocarditis Diagnosis and ManagementCardiac Imaging and Diagnostics