Background: Comparative data on the clinical outcomes of TTK Chitra mechanical heart valve prosthesis (CHVP), an indigenously developed low-cost tilting disc valve and commonly used bileaflet valve, the St. Jude medical (SJM) prosthesis are sparse. Methods: We conducted a retrospective follow-up study of consecutive patients undergoing mitral (MVR) and aortic valve replacement (AVR) with SJM or CHVP mechanical prostheses over a 6-year period at our institution. Results: Seven hundred and thirty-five patients who underwent isolated MVR (n = 510) or AVR (n = 225) were included in the study. Patients with CHVP were younger and belonged to a lower socioeconomic class. The study cohort was followed-up for 2836 patient-years (SJM: 1865.1, CHVP: 971.0). All-cause mortality (p = 0.894), valve-related mortality (p = 0.681), prosthetic valve thrombosis (p = 0.155), embolism (p = 0.210), hemorrhage (p = 0.959) andinfective endocarditis (IE, p = 0.084) were similar between both valve on follow-up. Estimated event free survival was 2302 ± 1 days in SJM as compared to 2484 ± 65 days in CHVP group (p = 0.393). Valve type was not an independent predictor of adverse events after adjusting for baseline data, time in therapeutic range and aspirin use. Subgroup analysis of patients who underwent MVR and AVR showed similar functional improvement and outcomes, except for a higher incidence of IE with SJM at the aortic position (p = 0.041).
Conclusion:The indigenously developed, low-cost CHVP has comparable midterm clinical performance as SJM in aortic or mitral positions.
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