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Journal and News Scan

Source: News from around the web.
Author(s): Claire Vernon

Patient Care and General Interest

Uruguay’s fight against tobacco and Phillip Morris was highlighted at the recent Annual Meeting of the American College of Cardiology, and one physician shares her thoughts.

The University of California Los Angeles has opened a new center, the Robert G. Kardashian Center for Esophageal Health, to focus on treatment, research, and education for esophageal disorders.

 

Drugs and Devices

Boston Scientific’s transcatheter Lotus Edge Aortic Valve System was cleared by the US Food and Drug Administration. The company launched the system recently in Europe and will launch it in the US soon.

Goggles that facilitated a mixed-reality view of 3D echocardiography were used for a percutaneous mitral valve intervention in Poland.

 

Research, Trials, and Funding

Researchers from St. Louis, Missouri, USA, report on the impact of a 2017 change in US lung transplant policy that expanded the geographic boundaries for determining which patients get first priority for donor lungs.

Simulation training improves a team’s ability to manage operating room fires more than training that is exclusively didactic, say researchers from Illinois, USA.

Source: The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Author(s): Won Kyoun Park, Jae Suk Baek, Bo Sang Kwon, Yu Mi Im, Ji Hye Lee, Eun Seok Choi, Chun Soo Park, Tae-Jin Yun

Park and colleagues sought to identify risk factors that could predict the need for systemic outflow relief operations (SORO) in newborn patients with transposed great arteries and either double-inlet left ventricle or tricuspid atresia. The authors evaluated data from 20 patients with double-inlet left ventricle and 10 patients with tricuspid atresia who underwent single-ventricle palliation between 2000 and 2018. Approximately 67% of patients underwent SORO, and arch obstruction and smaller systemic outflow tract area index at end-systolic phase were both predictive of a subsequent need for an SORO.

Source: Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging
Author(s): Radiological Society of North America

The Radiological Society of North America debuts its first issue of a focused publication dedicated to cardiothoracic imaging—Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging.

The editor is Suhny Abbara, MD, Professor of Radiology and Chief of Cardiothoracic Imaging Division at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

The first issue features an editorial by Abbara and a host of original research involving aortic dissection with 4D flow magnetic resonance imaging, dual-energy cardiac computed tomography to shed light on myocardial late iodine enhancement and extracellular volume quantification, and tissue tracking versus feature tracking for strain measurement on cardiac MR images.

Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging is a bimonthly journal available exclusively online. The journal is now accepting manuscript submissions that cover all aspects of cardiac, vascular, and pulmonary imaging.

Source: European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
Author(s): Yosuke Inoue, Hitoshi Matsuda, Atsushi Omura, Yoshimasa Seike, Kyokun Uehara, Hiroaki Sasaki, Junjiro Kobayashi

In 148 patients with type A aortic dissection who underwent emergency total arch replacement, 155 had a conventional elephant trunk procedure (CET, age 65 ± 12 years) and 33 had a frozen elephant trunk procedure (FET, 67 ± 11 years). Early mortality was similar in the two groups (8.7% with CET versus 6.1% with FET). The FET group showed advantages of false lumen thrombosis and aortic remodeling at early follow-up examinations.

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Author(s): US National Center for Health Statistics

Five highlights in the CDC’s most recent Health, United States report, based on data from 1999 to 2017:

  1. Black patients were more than twice as likely as Asians or Pacific Islanders to die of heart disease in both 1999 and 2017.
  2. Non-Hispanic whites are the only demographic whose rate of cardiovascular disease declined over the 18-year period.
  3. Black adults aged 20 and up were by far the most likely group to have hypertension between 2015 and 2016.
  4. Hispanics and non-Hispanic blacks were most likely to have diabetes and be obese in 2015 and 2016.
  5. Total cholesterol levels were relatively similar among all demographics between 2015 and 2016.
Source: Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Author(s): Shuang Rong, Linda G. Snetselaar, Guifeng Xu, Yangbo Sun, Buyun Liu, Robert B. Wallace, Wei Bao

Rong and colleagues evaluated data from 6,550 adults aged 40 to 75 years participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III 1988 to 1994 who had no history of cardiovascular disease or cancer and who were followed for an average of 18 years. They found that participants who never consumed breakfast had an 87% higher risk of cardiovascular disease-specific mortality than those who ate breakfast every day.

Source: The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
Author(s): Rick A. Nishimura, Patrick T. O’Gara, Joseph E. Bavaria, Ralph G. Brindis, John D. Carroll, Clifford J. Kavinsky, Brian R. Lindman, Jane A. Linderbaum, Stephen H. Little, Michael J. Mack, Laura Mauri, William R. Miranda, David M. Shahian, Thoralf M. Sundt III

The American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS), American College of Cardiology (ACC), American Society of Echocardiography (ASE), Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI), and Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) published a joint expert consensus and evidence-based recommendations for systems of care related to valvular heart disease with respect to patient outcomes, cost, and cost-effectiveness.

Source: Endovascular Today News
Author(s): Endovascular Today

At the Charing Cross Symposium, held April 15 to 18 in London, UK, Professor Fabio Verzini presented the 30-day data from Medtronic's Valiant Navion investigational device exemption study of 100 patients with thoracic aortic aneurysm and penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer. This study showed low rates of perioperative mortality at 2.0% and secondary procedures at 2.0%. The rate of type Ia endoleaks was 1.1% at imaging follow-up after one month.

Source: European Heart Journal
Author(s): Andrea Guala, Gisela Teixidó-Tura, Jose Rodríguez-Palomares, Aroa Ruiz-Muñoz, Lydia Dux-Santoy, Nicolas Villalva, Chiara Granato, Laura Galian, Laura Gutiérrez, Teresa González-Alujas, Violeta Sanchez, Alberto Forteza, David García-Dorado, Artur Evangelista

In this study, researchers from Spain have found that the longitudinal strain of the proximal aorta, as detected by cardiac magnetic resonance, is a risk factor for aortic root dilation rate and aortic events (hazard ratio 1.290, 95% confidence interval 1.123 - 1.481, P<0.001) in patients with Marfan syndrome.

Source: European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
Author(s): Wilko Reents, Sebastian Barth, Daniel P Griese, Sebastian Winkler, Jörg Babin-Ebell, Sebastian Kerber, Anno Diegeler, Michael Zacher, Karsten Hamm

Transcatheter aortic valve is usually implanted via transfemoral or transapical access. Reents and colleagues sought to compare the safety of these two access routes, using a retrospective analysis of their experience. Among more than 1,000 patients, the risk-adjusted short- and long-term mortality and major morbidity rates were similar for both approaches. The authors found that mortality was associated with the risk profile and the institutional experience but not with the access mode itself.

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