Aortic stenosis (AS) is caused by narrowing of one of the main heart valves. Replacing the valve is the only treatment to prevent the heart from failing or death. The timing of replacement is currently often too late - half of patients are left with permanent scarring and a quarter die within 3.5 years. Studies are underway to see if earlier replacement makes a difference. But for those with scarring of the heart, there is currently no tailored treatment. I want to change this by understanding why and how patients with scar are dying and what the investigators can do to prevent this. In this study, the investigators will use a heart scan (MRI) to detect scarring before valve replacement. After replacement, patients will receive a tiny monitor (paper clip size), which the investigators inject underneath the skin. This monitor continuously checks the heartbeat and can detect increased body fluid due to heart failure. The investigators will monitor patients for an average of 3 years to see if scarring is linked to abnormal heart rhythms and heart failure. Once the investigators know how and why, the investigators can target patients with available medications and design studies using specialised treatments, eg defibrillator implantation, to protect patients with scar from dying.
Valvular heart disease (VHD) affects around 1.5 million people above the age of 65 across the UK and is set to nearly double by 2050. Aortic Stenosis (AS) is the most common VHD in the UK, affecting 3% of those over 75 with more than 11,000 people requiring aortic valve replacement (AVR) in the UK each year (\>100,000 world-wide). Current guidelines recommend AVR to improve survival and symptom status when AS symptoms emerge or there is a reduction in left ventricle (LV) function (1), but years of excessive haemodynamic load result in an "AS cardiomyopathy" with LV hypertrophy, remodelling, diffuse and focal scar. The investigators, and others, have shown that these changes lead to an excess in morbidity and mortality, but the mechanisms of increased risk is unclear. Patients undergoing aortic valve replacement for severe aortic stenosis have a shorter life expectancy compared with the general population (2). Years of excessive haemodynamic load result in an "AS cardiomyopathy" with LV hypertrophy, remodelling, diffuse and focal scar. The investigators and others have shown that these changes to the heart muscle are associated with poor outcome. But the mechanism of how heart muscle damage leads to excess mortality is poorly understood. The proposed study will enhance our understanding of the residual risk after AVR and reveal the modes and substrate of mortality. Heart failure and heart rhythm disturbances (arrhythmias) are likely downstream effects of heart muscle damage, but without understanding the mode of death (heart failure, arrhythmia or other), the investigators are unable to target therapeutic strategies to improve outcomes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
192
Cardiac MRI scan pre- and post- aortic valve replacement to assess degree of left ventricular remodelling, fibrosis and myocardial blood flow.
Blood tests looking evidence of cardiac structural remodelling and function.
Determine post-AVR arrhythmia burden
Validated assessment of functional capacity - distance walked over 6 minute time frame.
Ultrasound assessment of heart structure and function. Standard of care in valve surgery pathway.
Barts Heart Centre
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGHeart failure death or hospitalisation for heart failure.
Time frame: 5 years after aortic valve replacement
Burden of non-sustained VT
As assessed on implantable cardiac monitor (approximate battery life 2.5 years)
Time frame: 2.5 years after aortic valve replacement.
All-cause mortality (all-cause and cardiovascular via NHS spine/death registration)
Time frame: 5 years after aortic valve replacement
change in functional capacity (6-minute walk test)
Time frame: At 6 weeks and 12 months after aortic valve replacement.
Heart failure symptoms
New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional classification (NYHA 1 least symptomatic, 4 most symptomatic)
Time frame: At 6 weeks and 12 months post aortic valve surgery
Heart failure symptoms
World Health Organisation Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (Higher score indicates greater disability)
Time frame: At 6 weeks and 12 months post aortic valve surgery
Burden of other serious arrhythmias requiring change in management
Participants with complete heart block, Mobitz 2 AV block, new onset atrial fibrillation
Time frame: 2.5 years after aortic valve replacement
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