Subcoronary versus full-root Ross procedure for the paediatric population: an early-to-midterm bicentric experience.

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Tác giả: David J Barron, Mi-Young Cho, Chelsea Christie, Julia Gaal, Gloria Ho, Osami Honjo, Alison Howell, Marcus Kelm, Peter Kramer, Peter Murin, Joachim Photiadis, Kyle Runeckles, Bana Samman, Viktoria Weixler, Mimi Xiaoming Deng

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: Germany : European journal of cardio-thoracic surgery : official journal of the European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 692696

 OBJECTIVES: With 2 different Ross autograft implantation techniques: subcoronary versus full-root evolving, the question remains which strategy demonstrates the better early/mid-term performance, especially concerning autograft durability. METHODS: Patients (0-18 years) undergoing Ross procedure from January 2012 to December 2022 in 2 high-volume centres were included. Patients undergoing both subcoronary and full-root Ross were analysed for early mortality, direct postoperative complications, 5-year survival, incidence of reinterventions/reoperations and autograft durability over time. Propensity score matching and regression analysis were used to overcome institutional differences. RESULTS: A total of 205 paediatric patients were included [median age at Ross: 7.6 years (1.9-13.5), 67% males]. No differences in baseline characteristics were noted between the groups, except for prior aortic valve repair, which occurred more frequently in the full-root Ross (19% vs 6.9%
  P = 0.03). Cardiopulmonary bypass durations (median 265 vs 221 min, P <
  0.01), ventilatory support and hospital stay were significantly longer in the subcoronary Ross (P = 0.02) with no differences in any postoperative complications. No differences were noted in 5-year survival [full-root: 93.3% (87.5-96.5) versus subcoronary: 96.5% (86.6-99.1), P = 0.45], incidence of autograft reoperations [full-root: 3.2% (1-9.9) versus subcoronary: 2.1% (0.3-14.9), P = 0.98] or incidence of autograft regurgitation ≥ moderate [full-root: 9.8% (5.3-18.2) versus subcoronary: 9.7% (3.1-30.5), P = 0.85) between the groups, also after matching. CONCLUSIONS: Independent of the technique, Ross procedure is performed with excellent survival and low autograft reoperation rates in high-volume centres. The longer, technically more challenging subcoronary Ross demonstrated no differences in early postoperative complications. A superiority in autograft durability has so far not been noticed either in the medium-term follow-up.
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