The Role of Extravalvular Cardiac Damage Staging in Aortic Valve Disease Management

Can J Cardiol. 2021 Jul;37(7):1004-1015. doi: 10.1016/j.cjca.2021.01.020. Epub 2021 Feb 1.

Abstract

Current management of patients with aortic valve disease, including aortic valve stenosis (AS), aortic valve regurgitation (AR), and mixed aortic valve disease (MAVD), remains challenging. American and European guideline recommendations regarding the timing of intervention are mainly based on the assessment of disease severity (ie, grading), presence of symptoms related to aortic valve disease, left ventricular systolic dysfunction, or LV enlargement. Furthermore, the decision regarding the type of intervention (ie, surgical vs transcatheter) is primarily based on risk assessment from surgical risk scores. There is, however, less emphasis on the importance of the assessment of anatomic and functional cardiac repercussions of aortic valve disease to guide the clinical management of these patients. Recently, a novel approach has been proposed to improve the management of aortic valve disease with 2 main components for risk stratification of the disease: 1) grading the severity of aortic valve disease, and 2) staging the extent of extravalvular cardiac damage associated with aortic valve disease with the use of echocardiography. To date, this novel approach of extravalvular cardiac damage staging was proposed and validated only in the context of AS but could be extended to other valvular heart diseases, including AR and MAVD. Further studies are also needed to test the incremental value of additional imaging parameters (eg, myocardial fibrosis by magnetic resonance) as well as blood biomarkers (eg, natriuretic peptide, cardiac troponin, and others) to the existing cardiac damage staging schemes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aortic Valve Disease* / classification
  • Aortic Valve Disease* / complications
  • Aortic Valve Disease* / diagnosis
  • Aortic Valve Disease* / surgery
  • Diagnostic Techniques, Cardiovascular*
  • Heart Diseases* / diagnosis
  • Heart Diseases* / etiology
  • Heart Diseases* / therapy
  • Humans
  • Risk Adjustment / methods*
  • Risk Assessment / methods
  • Severity of Illness Index
  • Time-to-Treatment

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