ANTITHROMBOTIC THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH SURGICAL BIOPROSTHETIC AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT
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Abstract
Aortic valve replacement (AVR) is the only life-saving treatment for patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis. Bioprosthetic valves are used in 90% of AVRs because they do not require lifelong anticoagulation. The major limitation of bioprosthetic valves is their limited durability compared to mechanical valves. In addition, bioprosthetic valves still carry a 2-3% risk of symptomatic valve thrombosis, stroke, and thromboembolism in the first 30 days after implantation, and a 1% annual risk thereafter. The risk of subclinical valve thrombosis is around 10% at 30 days and 25% at 1 year, and prevention of subclinical valve thrombosis is hypothesized to reduce the risk of clinical thrombotic events and perhaps even improve valve durability, although high-quality evidence is lacking.
This doctoral thesis comprises 7 chapters of varied methodology that summarize the evidence behind current recommendations for antithrombotic therapy after bioprosthetic AVR, identify evidence gaps, and present the design a randomized trial that aims to address some of these evidence gaps.
Chapter 1 introduces each included study with a brief summary.
Chapter 2 is a narrative review summarizing guideline recommendation for antithrombotic therapy after bioprosthetic AVR and the evidence upon which they are based.
Chapter 3 is an observational study describing antithrombotic prescribing practices in the VISION Cardiac Surgery cohort study.
Chapter 4 is a systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomized studies of antithrombotic therapy after transcatheter aortic valve replacement.
Chapter 5 is a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized and observational studies of subclinical valve thrombosis.
Chapter 6 presents the design and rationale of a feasibility trial of direct oral anticoagulants versus vitamin K antagonists in patients with a new surgical bioprosthetic AVR and atrial fibrillation.
Chapter 7 discusses the implications, limitations, and future avenues of the research presented in this doctoral thesis.