A Question of Clinical Reliability: Observed versus EuroSCORE-Predicted Mortality after Aortic Valve Replacement

Tamer Ghazy, Utz Kappert, Ahmed Ouda, Diana Conen, Klaus Matschke
Department of Cardiac Surgery, Dresden Heart Centre, Dresden Technical University, Germany

 

Background and aim of the study: The study aim was to determine the clinical reliability of the EuroSCORE as a predictor of operative risk in aortic valve replacement (AVR).
Methods: Between 2000 and 2007, a total of 1,497 patients underwent isolated elective AVR (no endocarditis, aortic procedure or re-do) at the authors’ institution. A fitting of the deviation of expected mortality (EM) from observed mortality (OM) was performed and studied. To identify the cause of deviation of EM, a multivariate analysis of the EuroSCORE variables (using SAS® JMP® software) was conducted on the available data, and the results were re-evaluated.
Results: An overestimation of EM was observed, and this was found to increase systematically with the rise in expected risk (0.3 ±1.0% at 5% OM versus 23.8

±1.9% at 35% OM; p <0.0001). A multivariate analysis of the EuroSCORE variables showed only age and preoperative neurological dysfunction as significant risk factors (p <0.003 and <0.04, respectively). All other EuroSCORE variables were statistically insignificant.
Conclusion: The EuroSCORE is a solid and practical concept, but is clinically unreliable as a predictor of operative risk for elective AVR; hence, it should no longer be used for this purpose in its present form. It is recommended that a statistical correction of the EuroSCORE deviation be used, and that an updated EuroSCORE or a new risk stratification tool be developed to predict operative risk for patients undergoing heart valve surgery.

The Journal of Heart Valve Disease 2010;19:16-20

 
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