PCI-TAVI was associated with significantly lower rates of 30-day stroke (RR 0.85) and in-hospital AKI (RR 0.56) compared to CABG-SAVR.
Does TAVI with PCI reduce 30-day mortality and stroke compared to SAVR with CABG in patients with concomitant severe aortic stenosis and coronary artery disease?
In patients with severe aortic stenosis and coronary artery disease, a less invasive PCI-TAVI approach yields comparable 30-day mortality but significantly lower rates of short-term stroke and acute kidney injury compared to traditional CABG-SAVR.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0% vs 0%
Abstract Background Patients with concomitant severe aortic stenosis and coronary artery disease pose a significant challenge in cardiovascular management.While traditional treatment involved surgical aortic valve replacement(SAVR) combined with coronary artery bypass grafting(CABG),transcatheter aortic valve implantation(TAVI) with percutaneous coronary intervention(PCI) has emerged as a less invasive alternative. Purpose This meta-analysis aimed to compare the short-term clinical outcomes of patients undergoing PCI-TAVI versus CABG-SAVR. Methods A systematic search of the PubMed, Cochrane, and Scopus databases was conducted to identify relevant studies that reported distinct short-term outcomes for patients undergoing PCI-TAVI versus CABG-SAVR, published up to January 15th 2025.The primary endpoint was 30-day all-cause mortality and stroke rates.Secondary endpoints included in-hospital major vascular complications,permanent pacemaker implantation(PPI) and acute kidney injury(AKI). Results A total of 136,763 patients from 7 observational and 2 randomized controlled trials(RCTs) were included, comprising 101,529 patients who underwent PCI-TAVI and 35,234 patients who received CABG-SAVR. No statistically significant difference was observed in 30-day mortality between the 2 groups(RRmortality,0.8395%CI,0.61–1.14,P=0.25),though a trend favouring PCI-TAVI was noted.Similarly,no significant difference was found in major vascular complications(RRvascular,1.7695%CI,0.51–6.09,P=0.37),although there was a trend toward a higher incidence in the PCI-TAVI group.Furthermore, PCI-TAVI was associated with significantly lower rates of 30-day stroke(RRstroke,0.8595%CI,0.73–1.00,P=0.048) and in-hospital AKI(RRAKI,0.5695%CI,0.36–0.88,P=0.01) compared to CABG-SAVR.Publication bias was not detected in funnel plot analysis,and Egger’s regression test confirmed no significant asymmetry.High heterogeneity was detected in 3/5 examined outcomes,particularly mortality.Sensitivity analysis revealed that a single study(Patlolla et al,2022) had a significant impact on the overall effect size.When this study was excluded,the adjusted analysis demonstrated a statistically significant survival advantage for PCI-TAVI,with lower 30-day mortality(RR’mortality,0.6695%CI,0.54–0.81,P0.001).The robustness and reliability of findings across different study subsets and analysis methods were confirmed through cumulative and sensitivity analyses. Conclusion This meta-analysis demonstrates that PCI-TAVI is associated with significantly lower 30-day rates of stroke and in-hospital AKI compared to CABG-SAVR, while 30-day mortality remains statistically comparable between the 2 groups.These findings highlight the evolving role of PCI-TAVI and future RCTs are necessary to validate these results.
Karampinos et al. (Sat,) reported a other. PCI-TAVI was associated with significantly lower rates of 30-day stroke (RR 0.85) and in-hospital AKI (RR 0.56) compared to CABG-SAVR.