Moderate aortic regurgitation plus another moderate valvular disease independently doubles risk of death or heart failure hospitalization (HR 2.83) versus isolated moderate AR.
Does the presence of concomitant moderate valvular heart disease worsen the prognosis of patients with moderate aortic regurgitation?
Moderate aortic regurgitation combined with another moderate valvular lesion carries a prognosis as severe as isolated significant aortic regurgitation, suggesting this combination is not benign and warrants closer clinical attention.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Abstract Aims Multivalvular heart disease (MVD), defined as coexisting lesions in two or more valves, poses significant diagnostic and prognostic challenges. While isolated valvular heart disease (VHD) is well characterized, the impact of moderate aortic regurgitation (AR) with another concomitant moderate VHD remains unclear. Current guidelines focus mainly on isolated severe lesions, potentially underestimating moderate MVD. This study assessed the prevalence and prognostic impact of concomitant moderate VHD in patients with moderate AR. Methods and results We retrospectively analyzed 794 patients with ≥ moderate AR (2017–2023) from a dedicated echocardiographic database. Groups were: isolated moderate AR (n=178), isolated significant AR (n=214), and moderate AR plus ≥ one concomitant moderate VHD (n=402). Significant AR was defined by the presence of ≥1 echocardiographic severity criterion. Exclusion criteria included cardiomyopathy, prior cardiac surgery, LVEF 50%, or severe VHD other than AR. Follow-up was 24 months for a composite endpoint of all-cause mortality and heart failure hospitalization (HHF). VHD severity was graded per guidelines. Patients with moderate AR plus another VHD were older (79.9 vs. 66.4 years, p0.001), with more comorbidities and larger left atria. During follow-up, 151 patients (18.8%) met the composite endpoint (63 HHF, 108 deaths). Moderate AR with another VHD independently predicted higher risk HR 2.83 (95% CI: 1.32–6.03; p = 0.007), comparable to isolated significant AR HR 2.65 (95% CI: 1.23–5.70; p = 0.013). Conclusions Moderate AR with another concomitant moderate VHD carries a prognosis similar to significant AR, indicating this combination is not benign and may be underestimated by current guidelines.
Benzoni et al. (Tue,) reported a other. Moderate aortic regurgitation plus another moderate valvular disease independently doubles risk of death or heart failure hospitalization (HR 2.83) versus isolated moderate AR.