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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 88, 225-233, Copyright © 1984 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association


ARTICLES

Factors influencing postoperative survival in aortic regurgitation. Analysis by Cox regression model

Y Louagie, C Brohet, A Robert, E Lopez, P Jaumin, JC Schoevaerdts and CH Chalant

From 1965 to 1981, 114 patients underwent aortic valve replacement for severe aortic regurgitation in our institution. Catheterization was performed preoperatively in 103 patients. Follow-up was possible in 98% of the survivors. Long-term survival was significantly different between patients in preoperative Functional Class I-II and those in Class III-IV (p less than 0.03); those with a preoperative cardiothoracic ratio less than 0.64 versus greater than or equal to 0.64 (p less than 0.001); and those with a preoperative ejection fraction greater than 0.50 versus less than or equal to 0.50 (p less than 0.03). A multifactorial analysis was used to identify the dominant preoperative prognostic variables affecting survival. Three of the 13 parameters examined simultaneously were found to independently influence survival rates: cardiothoracic ratio (p = 0.001), strain pattern on the electrocardiogram (p = 0.072), and left ventricular end- systolic pressure (p = 0.127). After stratification of the population into two groups according to preoperative functional class, the predictive variables were cardiothoracic ratio (p = 0.014), strain pattern (p = 0.050), and acute/chronic form of aortic regurgitation (p = 0.034). This statistical analysis enabled us to derive a mathematical equation for predicting an individual patient's probability of survival. We found a close fit between the survival rate predicted by the mathematical model and the observed survival rate.


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E. Klodas, M. Enriquez-Sarano, A. J. Tajik, C. J. Mullany, K. R. Bailey, and J. B. Seward
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