PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Norbert Frey AU - Richard Paul Steeds AU - Tanja K Rudolph AU - Jeetendra Thambyrajah AU - Antonio Serra AU - Eberhard Schulz AU - Jiri Maly AU - Marco Aiello AU - Guy Lloyd AU - Alessandro Santo Bortone AU - Karl Eugen Hauptmann AU - Alberto Clerici AU - Georg Delle Karth AU - Johannes Rieber AU - Ciro Indorfi AU - Massimo Mancone AU - Loic Belle AU - Alexander Lauten AU - Martin Arnold AU - Berto J Bouma AU - Matthias Lutz AU - Christiane Pohlmann AU - Jana Kurucova AU - Martin Thoenes AU - Peter Bramlage AU - David Messika-Zeitoun ED - , TI - Symptoms, disease severity and treatment of adults with a new diagnosis of severe aortic stenosis AID - 10.1136/heartjnl-2019-314940 DP - 2019 Nov 01 TA - Heart PG - 1709--1716 VI - 105 IP - 22 4099 - http://heart.bmj.com/content/105/22/1709.short 4100 - http://heart.bmj.com/content/105/22/1709.full SO - Heart2019 Nov 01; 105 AB - Objective Contemporary data on patients with previously undiagnosed severe aortic stenosis (AS) are scarce. We aimed to address this gap by gathering data from consecutive patients diagnosed with severe AS on echocardiography.Methods This was a prospective, multicentre, multinational, registry in 23 tertiary care hospitals across 9 European countries. Patients with a diagnosis of severe AS were included using echocardiography (aortic valve area (AVA) <1 cm2, indexed AVA <0.6 cm2/m2, maximum jet-velocity (Vmax) >4 m/s and/or mean transvalvular gradient >40 mm Hg).Results The 2171 participants had a mean age of 77.9 years and 48.0% were female. The mean AVA was 0.73 cm2, Vmax4.3 m/s and mean gradient 47.1 mm Hg; 62.1% had left ventricular hypertrophy and 27.3% an ejection fraction (EF) <50%. 1743 patients (80.3%) were symptomatic (shortness-of-breath 91.0%; dizziness 30.2%, chest pain 28.9%). Patients had a EuroSCORE II of 4.0; 25.3% had a creatinine clearance <50 mL/min, and 3.2% had an EF <30%. Symptomatic patients were older and had more comorbidities than asymptomatic patients. Despite European Society of Cardiology 2017 valvular heart disease guideline class I recommendation, in only 76.2% a decision was made for an intervention (transcatheter 50.4%, surgical aortic valve replacement 25.8%). In asymptomatic patients, 57.7% with a class I/IIa indication were scheduled for a procedure, while 36.3% patients without an indication had their valve replaced.Conclusions The majority of patients with severe AS presented at an advanced disease stage. Management of severe AS remained suboptimal in a significant proportion of contemporary patients with severe AS.Trial registration number NCT02241447;Results.