Between January 1980 and June 1988, 51 patients over 80 years of age underwent open heart surgery at the La Pitié hospital (26 women and 25 men; average age 82 +/- 2 years, range 80-90 years). The cardiac pathology was calcific aortic stenosis (AS) in 40 cases, associated with coronary artery disease in 7 cases, mitral valve prolapse in 3 cases, coronary artery disease alone in 6 cases [complicated by a post-infarction ventricular septal defect (VSD) in one patient] or associated with aortic regurgitation in 1 case, and degeneration of an aortic bioprosthetic valve in 1 case. Forty patients (78%) were in Stage III or IV or the NYHA Classification. There was no other major pathology associated with the cardiac disease. Aortic valve replacement (AVR) was carried out in 42 patients, with a bioprosthetic valve in 38 patients. This procedure was associated with coronary bypass surgery in 7 cases and carotid artery surgery in 1 case. A mitral bioprosthesis was implanted in 2 patients and mitral valvuloplasty was carried out in 1 patient. An isolated myocardial revascularisation procedure was performed in 5 cases; the VSD was closed in 1 case. The hospital mortality was 17.6 per cent (9 patients). All deaths were of cardiac origin. Eleven patients had no postoperative complications at all. The 3 year survival rate of those who survived surgery was 71 per cent. Of the current 31 survivors, 29 are in Stage I or II of the NYHA Classification. These results suggest that surgery can be offered to octogenarians with invalidating cardiac disease alone carrying a poor short term prognosis.