Background: Subcommissural aortic annuloplasty (SCA) has been recommended for treatment of functional aortic regurgitation (AR), but its association with sinotubular junction adjustment is still controversial.
Methods: Sixty patients with moderate or severe functional AR secondary to proximal ascending aorta aneurysm operated on between May 2004 and December 2010 were reviewed. Forty patients underwent SCA and ascending aorta repair (SCA group; mean age, 65 ± 9 years) and 20 underwent ascending aorta repair alone (non-SCA group; mean age, 69 ± 8 years). Preoperative AR grades were comparable between groups (p = 0.9). Echocardiographic data at discharge and during follow-up (SCA group, 41 ± 13 months; non-SCA group, 46 ± 13 months) were analyzed.
Results: Improvement of mean AR grade was better in the SCA group than in the non-SCA group at discharge (0.78 ± 0.9 vs 1.8 ± 0.1/4+, p = 0.0001) and at follow-up (0.44 ± 0.8 vs 2.4 ± 0.7/4+, p = 0.0001). Cox-regression analysis (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]) identified a higher residual AR at discharge (0.14 [0.012-0.37], p = 0.02) and the surgical technique, SCA or not (0.5 [0.03-0.899], p = 0.04), as predictors of more than grade 2/4+ AR at follow-up. Five-year freedom from more than grade 2/4+ AR was 94.4% ± 5.4% vs 58% ± 16% in SCA vs non-SCA (p = 0.02), respectively, and the survival rate was 95% ± 5% vs 89% ± 7.5% (p = 0.7). No valve stenosis was observed in the SCA group.
Conclusions: SCA is effective for treatment of functional AR, providing stable results even for significant AR. Our results suggest that it should be possibly associated to sinotubular junction adjustment. SCA seems to not impair normal aortic valve opening.
Copyright © 2013 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.