Long-term results of surgical ventricular reconstruction and comparison with the Surgical Treatment for Ischemic Heart Failure trial.

Pubmed ID: 35599207

Journal: The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery

Publication Date: Feb. 1, 2024

MeSH Terms: Humans, Clinical Trials as Topic, Heart Failure, Treatment Outcome, Stroke Volume, Myocardial Ischemia, Heart Ventricles

Authors: Velazquez EJ, Gaudino M, Robinson NB, Audisio K, Rahouma M, Girardi LN, Fremes SE, Benedetto U, Castelvecchio S, Soletti GJ, Cancelli G, Tam DY, Garatti A, Doenst T, Michler RE, Menicanti L

Cite As: Gaudino M, Castelvecchio S, Rahouma M, Robinson NB, Audisio K, Soletti GJ, Cancelli G, Tam DY, Garatti A, Benedetto U, Doenst T, Girardi LN, Michler RE, Fremes SE, Velazquez EJ, Menicanti L. Long-term results of surgical ventricular reconstruction and comparison with the Surgical Treatment for Ischemic Heart Failure trial. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2024 Feb;167(2):713-722.e7. Epub 2022 Apr 26.

Studies:

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The role of surgical ventricular reconstruction (SVR) in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy is controversial. Observational series and the Surgical Treatment of IsChemic Heart failure (STICH) trial reported contradictory results. SVR is highly dependent on operator experience. The aim of this study is to compare the long-term results of SVR between a high-volume SVR institution and the STICH trial using individual patient data. METHODS: Patients undergoing SVR at San Donato Hospital (Milan) were compared with patients undergoing SVR in STICH (as-treated principle) by inverse probability treatment-weighted Cox regression. The primary outcome was all-cause mortality. RESULTS: The San Donato cohort included 725 patients, whereas the STICH cohort included 501. Compared with the STICH-SVR cohort, San Donato patients were older (66.0, lower quartile, upper quartile [Q1, Q3: 58.0, 72.0] vs 61.9 [Q1, Q3: 55.1, 68.8], P < .001) and with lower left ventricular end-systolic volume index at baseline (LVESVI: 77.0 [Q1, Q3: 59.0, 97.0] vs 80.8 [Q1, Q3: 58.5, 106.8], P = .02). Propensity score weighting yielded 2 similar cohorts. At 4-year follow-up, mortality was significantly lower in the San Donato cohort compared with the STICH-SVR cohort (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.71; 95% confidence interval, 0.53-0.95; P = .001). Greater postoperative LVESVI was independently associated with mortality (hazard ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.03). At 4 to 6 months of follow-up, the mean reduction of LVESVI in the San Donato cohort was 39.6%, versus 10.7% in the STICH-SVR cohort (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with postinfarction LV remodeling undergoing SVR at a high-volume SVR institution had better long-term results than those reported in the STICH trial, suggesting that a new trial testing the SVR hypothesis may be warranted.