Background: Little information is available regarding the clinical and long-term results of patients with complex prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) involving the aortic root who undergo root replacement based on the Cabrol or Bentall procedures.
Methods: Between January 2007 and December 2011, 148 patients underwent cardiac operations for PVE. The analysis included 31 patients with complex PVE and concomitant destruction of the aortic root. Of these, 13 patients were treated by the Cabrol procedure and 18 patients by the Bentall procedure. The mean EuroSCORE for mortality was 50.7%±3.8%. Mean follow-up was 3.8±0.4 years (range, ≤8.0 years), with a total of 97 patient-years.
Results: The observed 30-day mortality was 12.9% and 5-year survival was 75.3%. The most common cause of death was septic multiple organ failure (42.9%). Independent predictors of mortality in multivariate analyses were terminal renal failure (odds ratio [OR], 4.8; p<0.01), type 2 diabetes mellitus (OR, 4.6; p<0.01), postoperative renal failure (OR, 4.0; p<0.01), and staphylococcal infection (OR, 2.1; p=0.01). The prevalence of freedom from reinfection was 100.0% and that from valve-related events was 93.5%.
Conclusions: Complex PVE is associated with quite high mortality and morbidity. Composite aortic root replacement provided good clinical and long-term outcomes as well as a low prevalence of reinfection and valve-related events. These results seem not to be inferior to those reported for noncomplex PVE. If the Bentall "button" technique was not feasible, the Cabrol procedure also provided excellent results.
Copyright © 2012 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.