Article Text
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate immediate and midterm results after balloon valvoplasty in a paediatric population with congenital aortic stenosis, giving special consideration to aortic regurgitation.
Design: Retrospective study.
Setting: Two tertiary referral centres for paediatric cardiology.
Patients: 70 consecutive patients, with an age range of 0–16.4 years. Group A infants < 3 months old (n = 21). Group B children > 3 months old (n = 49). Median follow up time was 19.8 months, range 0–158 months.
Intervention: All patients underwent balloon aortic valvoplasty. The balloon to annulus ratio was selected at a mean of 0.90 (range 0.67–1.0).
Main outcome measures: Doppler gradients and degree of aortic regurgitation.
Results: The pressure gradient dropped significantly with the intervention and increased mildly at follow up. Freedom from relevant aortic regurgitation (that is, moderate and severe) was initially lower in group A (75% v 90% after one month) but after two years the difference between the two groups was not significant (50% v 61%). Freedom from reintervention was significantly lower in group A (with 35% v 80%) after three years.
Conclusion: Aortic balloon valvoplasty is safe and effective but has a high rate of early reintervention in infants with critical aortic stenosis. The major long term problem is progressive aortic regurgitation, which does not seem to be prevented by the use of small balloons.
- aortic valve stenosis
- catheterisation
- balloon dilatation
- aortic valve insufficiency
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Aortic balloon valvoplasty has now become established as an alternative to surgery for the long term palliation of congenital aortic stenosis in children. However, residual stenosis and the occurrence of aortic regurgitation are well known problems after balloon valvoplasty, as well as after surgery.1,2 While residual stenosis has little influence on future surgical options, balloon valvoplasty induced aortic regurgitation is often the result of commissural avulsion, cusp dehiscence, and cusp tear or perforation and it can make further surgical reinterventions more difficult.3,4 Oversized balloons are a risk factor for aortic regurgitation.5–8 The purpose of this study was to evaluate the results of balloon aortic valvoplasty in two paediatric cardiology centres where no oversized balloons were used. We focused on the transvalvar gradient and on the occurrence and progression of aortic regurgitation in the medium and long term follow up.
METHODS
Patients
This was a retrospective study of 70 consecutive children with congenital aortic stenosis who underwent balloon valvoplasty between December 1985 and August 1999 at two tertiary paediatric cardiology care centres. On account of the different clinical presentation, risks, and outcome, two age groups were formed for evaluation (table 1). All patients in group A were in a critical clinical condition with severe heart failure. In all of the group A patients one or more of the following four criteria were fulfilled: need of ventilatory support; need of inotropes; need of prostaglandins for maintenance of ductus patency; and severely impaired left ventricular function in two dimensional echocardiography. In group B, four patients had undergone previous surgical aortic valvotomy.
All patients had had a complete echocardiographic examination the day before the intervention. The degree of the stenosis was assessed by continuous wave Doppler ultrasound. The valve morphology was analysed by means of two dimensional echocardiography. There were 17 tricommissural, 51 bicommissural, and two monocommissural aortic valves. One patient (four months of age) was excluded from this study because the attempted balloon valvoplasty was not technically feasible. There were no patients with significant subaortic stenosis.
The indication for balloon valvoplasty was the presence of clinical symptoms and an ECG strain pattern, a peak Doppler gradient higher than 70, or a mean gradient higher than 40 mm Hg in the absence of symptoms, with at most mild aortic regurgitation. In children with critical aortic stenosis and heart failure, balloon valvoplasty was performed irrespective of their Doppler gradients.
All but seven procedures were conducted under general anaesthesia. We used a retrograde transcutaneous femoral approach7 in all but one patient, for whom an axillary approach was used on account of coarctation. The left ventricular–aortic junction was measured at the hinge point of the valve leaflet by means of echocardiography and angiography. The balloon to annulus ratio was intended to be less than 1.0 and ranged from 0.67–1.0, with a mean (SD) of 0.9 (0.07). Peak to peak pressure gradients and supra-aortic and left ventricular angiograms were obtained before and after dilatation. Aortic regurgitation was graded by means of angiography from 0 to 5 as described by Hunt and colleagues9 and by means of echocardiography as none, mild, moderate, and severe as described below. The mean (SD) fluoroscopy time was 32 (14) minutes.
The median follow up was 19.8 months, with a range of 0–158 months. Complete echocardiographic re-evaluation was performed the day after the intervention and at least annually during follow up. All the echocardiographic measurements up to the time of reintervention were included in the study.
Echocardiography
In patients with normal left ventricular function, the severity of aortic stenosis was graded according to Doppler gradient measurements. The stenosis was considered to be severe if the maximum Doppler gradient was > 70 mm Hg or the mean gradient > 40 mm Hg. If the maximum gradient was between 50–70 mm Hg or the mean gradient between 25–40 mm Hg, the stenosis was considered to be moderate. If the maximum gradient was < 50 mm Hg and the mean gradient < 25 mm Hg, the stenosis was considered to be mild.10–15
The severity of aortic regurgitation was also assessed echocardiographically.16,17 Mild aortic regurgitation was defined by the colour jet ending proximal to the tip of the anterior mitral valve leaflet, jet width < 30% of the left ventricular outflow tract diameter, pressure half time > 600 ms, and end diastolic retrograde flow in the descending thoracic aorta < 20 cm/s. Moderate aortic regurgitation was defined by the colour jet ending distal to the mitral valve, jet width > 30% of the left ventricular outflow tract diameter, pressure half time < 600 ms, end diastolic retrograde flow in the descending thoracic aorta 20–40 cm/s, pandiastolic retrograde flow in the abdominal aorta, and dilated left ventricle. Severe aortic regurgitation was defined by the colour jet length and width, pressure half time, and flow pattern in the abdominal aorta as described for grade 2, plus end diastolic retrograde flow in the descending thoracic aorta > 40 cm/s and a moderately to severely dilated left ventricle.
Statistical analysis
Groups were compared by the unpaired t test, assuming equal variances. Survival and freedom from reinterventions were estimated with the Kaplan Meier equation, followed by a log rank test. The difference between the two groups was significant when p < 0.05.
IMMEDIATE RESULTS
Gradient relief
In both groups, the peak to peak catheter gradient and instantaneous Doppler gradient were significantly reduced. The invasively measured peak to peak gradient was reduced from a mean (SD) of 80 (26) mm Hg to 32 (16) mm Hg (p < 0.001) in group A and from 68 (27) mm Hg to 29 (13) mm Hg (p < 0.001) in group B. The maximal Doppler gradient decreased from a mean (SD) of 75 (25) mm Hg to 45 (15) mm Hg in group A (p < 0.001) and from 88 (23) mm Hg to 52 (17) mm Hg in group B (p < 0.001) (fig 1). The mean Doppler gradient decreased from a mean (SD) of 50 (16) mm Hg to 27 (10) mm Hg (p < 0.001) in group A and from 51 (16) mm Hg to 30 (9) mm Hg (p < 0.001) in group B. The residual aortic stenosis of the survivors of group A (n = 19) was severe in nine patients (47%), moderate in four patients (21%), and mild in six patients (32%). In group B (n = 49) the respective values were six patients (12%), 25 patients (51%), and 18 patients (37%).
Aortic regurgitation
Before the intervention, aortic regurgitation was absent or trivial (grade 0–1) in all patients. Immediate postinterventional angiographic assessment of aortic regurgitation in group A was possible for 18 patients. Aortic regurgitation progressed to grade 2 in four patients and to grades 3, 4, and 5 in one patient each. In group B, grade 0 and 1 persisted in 34 of 49 patients. Postinterventional aortic regurgitation was considered to be grade 2 in 10 patients and grade 3 in five patients. Grades 4 and 5 did not occur in this group. Table 2 shows the results of the echocardiographic assessment of aortic regurgitation. Neither the balloon/annulus ratio, nor the age at the time of intervention, nor the valve morphology correlated with the occurrence of aortic regurgitation.
Complications
In group A, the femoral artery was occluded in 12 patients (57%), which was successfully treated by heparin in eight patients and by fibrinolysis in three patients, leaving one permanent occlusion. In group B, the femoral artery was occluded in nine patients (18%) and was successfully treated by heparin in six patients, by fibrinolysis in two patients, and by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in one patient. A superficial femoral artery tear required surgical repair in one patient. During catheterisation ventricular fibrillation occurred in two patients of group A (one fatal) and in one patient of group B. Five patients in group B had a short non-sustained run of ventricular tachycardia. Two patients of each group had a sinus bradycardia (one fatal).
Early death
Two patients, two and 11 days old, died during the intervention of bradycardia and ventricular fibrillation, respectively. One neonate with severe congestive heart failure, who underwent balloon valvoplasty during the first day of life, died 24 hours after the balloon valvoplasty of severe congestive heart failure.
LONG TERM RESULTS
Doppler gradients
The last available Doppler gradient at a median follow up time of 19.8 months (range 0–158 months) showed a rise in the maximum Doppler gradient to a mean (SD) of 60 (23) mm Hg in group A (p < 0.001 compared with the immediate postdilatation value) and to 55 (23) mm Hg in group B (insignificant compared with the immediate postinterventional measurement). The mean Doppler gradients at last follow up were a mean (SD) of 37 (20) mm Hg in group A (p = 0.04) and 31 (15) mm Hg in group B (not significant).
Aortic regurgitation
From our follow up at a median of 19.8 months (range of 0–158 months), the probability of the occurrence of moderate or severe aortic regurgitation was estimated by means of the Kaplan-Meier equation. We calculated an actuarial freedom from moderate and severe aortic regurgitation in group A of 75% after one month, 62% after one year, and 50% after two years and in group B of 90% after one month, 71% after one year, and 61% after two and three years (fig 2).
Reinterventions
There were 11 (52%) reinterventions in group A (n = 21): six for severe residual aortic stenosis, one for severe aortic regurgitation, and four for severe aortic regurgitation and aortic stenosis. The interventions were repeat balloon valvoplasty in two patients, surgical aortic valvotomy in four patients, valve repair in two patients, and valve replacement in three patients (one aortic homograft and two Ross procedures). There were 13 (26%) reinterventions in group B (n = 49): nine for severe residual aortic stenosis (four valvar, three subvalvar, and two supravalvar stenoses), three for severe aortic regurgitation, and one for severe aortic stenosis and aortic regurgitation. The interventions were repeat balloon valvoplasty in three patients, surgical valvotomy in two, aortic valve repair in two, resection of supravalvar aortic stenosis in one, and valve replacement in five (aortic valve prosthesis in two, aortic homograft in one, and Ross procedure in two patients). Reinterventions were necessary at an earlier stage in group A than in group B. The actuarial freedom from reintervention at one, two, and three years was 55%, 44%, and 35% in group A, and 89%, 86%, and 80% in group B, respectively, as calculated by the Kaplan-Meier equation (fig 3).
Late death
Four patients died later on during follow up: three in group A and one in group B. All the late deaths resulted from the progression of valvar heart disease and after surgical intervention: one after aortic valve reconstruction, one after mitral valve replacement for the treatment of endocarditis, one after the Konno procedure, and one after the Ross procedure at the age of three, six, and six months and 14 years, respectively.
DISCUSSION
The outcome of balloon aortic valvoplasty in our population in terms of immediate gradient reduction is comparable with that reported by others.1,5,6,18–26 The selection of a moderate balloon size (balloon to annulus ratio < 1) did not have a negative influence on gradient reduction. This is consistent with the registry study, which found no correlation between the balloon to annulus ratio (range 0.56–1.5) and the gradient reduction in 204 patients.1 Subsequently, gradients remained low for many years. These good results confirm the favourable and long lasting success of balloon aortic valvoplasty in reducing the left ventricular pressure load in the vast majority of patients of group B and, to a lesser extent, of group A. The significant increase of gradients in the newborn group during early follow up reflects recovery from an initially depressed ventricular function and not a decrease in valve area or restenosis. Balloon valvoplasty has a low procedure related mortality. All three early deaths occurred in neonates with severe congestive heart failure. Different results for the two age groups with regard to gradient relief and the progression of aortic valve regurgitation after balloon valvoplasty are most likely related to the valve morphology itself. In neonates and infants, stenotic aortic valves tend to be very dysmorphic, thickened, and myxomatous, whereas aortic stenosis in older patients is more often related to less dysmorphic and thinner valves with fusion of one or two commissures.27,28
Aortic regurgitation after balloon aortic valvoplasty is of major concern. The relation between oversized balloons and an increased incidence of postinterventional aortic regurgitation is well known.5,6,8 In an animal model, Helgason and colleagues7 showed that, if the balloon to annulus ratio exceeded 1.2, there was significant damage to the aortic and mitral valve, as well as to the ventricular septum. We used 0.7 to 1.0 balloons and did not find any correlation between the balloon to annulus ratio and aortic regurgitation in this population. Even with the use of moderate sized balloons, the occurrence of aortic regurgitation immediately after balloon valvoplasty in our patients is in the same range as in other reports,1,6,18,20,21,26,29 although the lack of standardised quantification and examiner dependent grading makes comparison difficult. If the incidence and degree of aortic regurgitation were low immediately after balloon valvoplasty, they did not remain so in the medium and long term follow up. Indeed, we showed by means of repeated Doppler measurements, which combined colour flow and pulsed wave Doppler criteria, that the course of aortic regurgitation is progressive. The combination of colour flow and pulsed wave Doppler criteria was a useful tool in evaluating postinterventional aortic regurgitation.
It is therefore not surprising that surgical reintervention was required as often for aortic regurgitation as for residual aortic stenosis in our study. However, aortic regurgitation clearly outweighed aortic stenosis as an indication for valve replacement.
Why aortic regurgitation progresses over time is not known. Inspection at surgery, if necessary, shows commissural avulsion, tearing, perforation, extensive scarring, and calcification of the aortic valve.3,4,8,30 Tears, perforation, and partial detachment of the cusp with cusp prolapse may be explained by the procedure itself.8 Blood flow through the aortic valve leads to constant haemodynamic trauma of the valve tissue and may result in progressive tearing, scarring, retraction, and calcification of the valve, even in the absence of major residual stenosis.
The crucial point would be a comparison of balloon valvoplasty with the results of primary aortic valve surgery in the same patient population. The occurrence and progression of aortic regurgitation are documented after surgical valvotomy as well.11,29–31 Unfortunately, quantitative data on aortic regurgitation after surgical valvotomy are practically non-existent. One study30 reported an incidence of 38% for moderate to severe aortic regurgitation at 4.3 years’ follow up after standard surgical valvotomy in 48 patients. However, the assessment of the degree of regurgitation in this study was based only on rough colour flow Doppler estimates, which precludes an accurate comparison with our data. To answer the question as to whether the low procedural risk and the low incidence of sequelae of balloon valvoplasty outweigh the advantage of possibly more valve preserving surgical valvotomy, it would be necessary to conduct a prospective randomised study.
Conclusion
Aortic balloon valvoplasty is safe and effective in the treatment of congenital aortic stenosis. In critical aortic stenosis of the neonate, the rate of early reintervention was quite high. In both age groups, significant aortic regurgitation at an early stage after balloon valvoplasty was uncommon, but progressive aortic regurgitation appears to be a major long term problem. Aortic valve replacement due to severe and progressive balloon valvoplasty induced aortic regurgitation was necessary in 10% of patients (7 of 70). The use of small balloons (⩽ 100% of the diameter of the aortic annulus) did not prevent late aortic regurgitation. Recognising that surgical valvotomy often gives good results and that the mortality rate in neonatal critical aortic stenosis has decreased in recent years, we believe that a randomised prospective study comparing surgery with balloon valvoplasty would be of major interest.