Although patients undergoing TAVI at hospitals without on-site CS department were older and at higher predicted perioperative death risk, major complications, and in-hospital mortality were not statistically different, suggesting the feasibility and safety of Heart Team-based TAVI at non-CS sites. These findings need confirmation in future randomized study.
This study demonstrates that TAVI provides excellent outcomes in all risk categories. Compared with SAVR, TV-TAVI yields similar in-hospital mortality among low-risk patients and lower in-hospital mortality among intermediate and high-risk patient populations.
Our finding of no difference in in-hospital mortality in propensity-score matched low-surgical-risk patients treated by SAVR or TF-TAVR in a routine clinical setting indicates that TF-TAVR can be offered safely to individual patients, despite their operative risk being low. This finding needs to be confirmed in a randomized trial.
In patients with intermediate risk according to EuroScore (10-20%) the risk of post-operative delirium and in-hospital mortality is significantly higher after surgical aortic valve replacement than after transfemoral procedure. This may be considered for patient guidance and the decision as to which procedure is able to achieve the best result including minimizing side effects.
Across the spectrum of hospital volumes from 11 to 415 patients undergoing TF-TAVI per year in Germany, there was a continuous, statistically significant association of lower average observed as well as risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality with increasing TF-TAVI volumes.
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