27 New Approaches to the Surgical Treatment of End-Stage Heart Failure
Epidemiology, pathophysiology, and limitations of current management
Scope of the Problem
According to the American Heart Association, approximately 6 million people in the United States have congestive heart failure (CHF). Available statistics indicate that the incidence of CHF in the population approaches 15.2 per 1000 after age 65, 31.7 per 1000 after age 75, and 65.2 per 1000 after age 85, with 1,106,000 hospital discharges for heart failure (HF) in 2006 alone.1 HF is the leading cause of hospitalization in patients older than 65,2 with a reported associated cost of $24 to $50 billion annually.1–4 On a global scale, HF reportedly affects 0.4% to 2.0% of the adult population.5
Despite great advances in the understanding of the pathophysiology of HF and the development of medications that can potentially attenuate the progression of that pathophysiology, morbidity and mortality from this disease remain high. The incidence rate of hospitalization for HF increased by 70% during the 1990s,2 and patients with New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class IV symptoms currently have a reported 1-year mortality rate of 30% to 50%.6 By comparison, the corresponding rates for NYHA Class I-II patients and Class II-III patients are 5% and 10% to 15%, respectively. (Table 27-1 defines the NYHA symptomatic classes.7) Thus, one of the major goals in the management of HF is the prevention of progression to advanced stages.
Functional Capacity | Objective Assessment |
---|---|
Class I. Patients with cardiac disease but without resulting limitation of physical activity. Ordinary physical activity does not cause undue fatigue, palpitation, dyspnea, or anginal pain. | A. No objective evidence of cardiovascular disease |
Class II. Patients with cardiac disease resulting in slight limitation of physical activity. They are comfortable at rest. Ordinary physical activity results in fatigue, palpitation, dyspnea, or anginal pain. | B. Objective evidence of minimal cardiovascular disease |
Class III. Patients with cardiac disease resulting in marked limitation of physical activity. They are comfortable at rest. Less than ordinary activity causes fatigue, palpitation, dyspnea, or anginal pain. | C. Objective evidence of moderately severe cardiovascular disease |
Class IV. Patients with cardiac disease resulting in inability to carry on any physical activity without discomfort. Symptoms of heart failure or the anginal syndrome may be present even at rest. If any physical activity is undertaken, discomfort is increased. | D. Objective evidence of severe cardiovascular disease. |
From The Criteria Committee of the New York Heart Association: Nomenclature and Criteria for Diagnosis of Diseases of the Heart and Great Vessels, 9th edition. Boston: Little, Brown & Co, 1994, pp 253–256.
Brief Review of the Pathophysiology
The current understanding of the pathophysiology of chronic HF maintains that initial increases in end-diastolic ventricular volume and pressure trigger the release of endogenous natriuretic peptides that promote diuresis.8–10 Concurrent activation of the sympathetic nervous system causes peripheral vasoconstriction and increases the inotropic state of the myocardium. Initially, these mechanisms act to decrease excessive preload (which restores wall tension to normal) and maintain cardiac output (CO) and arterial blood pressure (BP) in the face of mildly depressed ventricular function. Eventually, however, the carotid, ventricular, and aortic arch baroreceptors are activated by the relative hypovolemia, which leads to further activation of the sympathetic nervous system (via the medullary vasomotor regulatory center), as well as the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis, and the release of vasopressin. The resultant peripheral vasoconstriction, mild fluid retention, and further increases in heart rate and inotropy will again compensate for the failing heart. Ultimately, however, chronic sympathetic stimulation causes myocardial β1-adrenergic receptors to downregulate, and as ventricular function deteriorates, left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic volumes and pressures again increase, resulting in increased ventricular wall tension. During this time, increased levels of angiotensin II result in adverse myocardial remodeling. Remodeling is a key event in the progression of HF and refers to changes in not only ventricular geometry (e.g., dilation) but also myocardial composition (e.g., myocyte hypertrophy, lengthening, hyperplasia, fibrosis). In addition, increased circulating levels of angiotensin II may enhance myocyte apoptosis (programmed cell death) via a protein kinase C–mediated increase in cytosolic calcium levels.11
Modern medical management of chronic CHF, therefore, uses agents that have been shown to decelerate the progression to severe failure, reduce adverse myocardial remodeling, and enhance survival (e.g., angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors,12–14 β-blockers,15–18 and aldosterone antagonists19,20), in combination with other agents that improve the symptoms but have not been shown to improve long-term survival alone (e.g., diuretics, digoxin). (See Chapter 10.)
Limitations of Current Medical Management
Given that there are currently between 300,000 and 800,000 patients in the United States who have progressed to NYHA Class III and IV status despite modern medical management,21 it appears that current treatment strategies have significant limitations. Part of the failure of medical management alone to control the progression of the disease may be that treatment has traditionally focused on systolic dysfunction. Four classic stages of HF have been described: (1) an initial cardiac injury or insult, (2) activation of specific neurohormonal axes with resultant cardiac remodeling, (3) compensatory fluid retention and peripheral vasoconstriction, and (4) ultimate contractile failure.22 In contrast with this traditional conception, it is now known that diastolic dysfunction (decreased lusitropic function) is the primary problem in an estimated 30% to 50% of patients with HF. Pharmacologic interventions aimed at improving diastolic dysfunction and attenuating (if not reversing) remodeling currently are the subject of randomized trials worldwide.
Surgical options for heart failure
A growing number of surgical procedures exist (or have been developed) to relieve CHF symptoms and arrest the progression of the disease through correction of abnormal myocardial depolarization, enhancement of myocardial blood supply, improvement in ventricular loading conditions, and restoration of more normal ventricular geometry. Box 27-1 provides a list of current surgical interventions for CHF.
Cumulative worldwide experience with the interventions listed in Box 27-1 suggests that these procedures not only relieve symptoms but may attenuate or possibly arrest the progressive myocardial remodeling that accompanies chronic HF.23–27 In some cases, partial reversal of the adverse myocardial remodeling has been demonstrated, and combination therapy (surgical intervention with targeted pharmacologic treatment) intended to enhance reverse remodeling is actively being investigated.28
Revascularization
Coronary artery disease has become the most common cause of HF.29 Of those patients currently listed for heart transplantation, 36% carry a primary diagnosis of ischemic heart disease, and 31% of those transplanted in 2007 had ischemia as their primary indication. Commonly used terms describing the extent of myocardial injury are defined in Table 27-2.
Term | Definition |
---|---|
Ischemic | Insufficient oxygen supply to meet myocardial oxygen demand |
Stunned | Acute myocardial dysfunction after an ischemic event with potential for full recovery |
Hibernating | Chronically ischemic, dysfunctional myocardium with potential for full recovery |
Maimed | Dysfunctional myocardium on the basis of ischemia that does not fully recover |
Infarcted | Myocardial necrosis caused by ischemia with no potential for recovery |
Where viable myocardium and feasible targets exist, revascularization of chronically ischemic, hibernating myocardium can improve ventricular function, downgrade NYHA functional class, and improve prognosis.30,31 Although the primary benefit of revascularization appears to be functional improvement of the left ventricle, reducing ischemic substrate for arrhythmias and retarding adverse myocardial remodeling are important secondary benefits.24
Despite an increased perioperative risk for morbidity and mortality in this population, the world’s literature reports current survival rates between 57% and 75% at 5 years, with in-hospital mortality rates between 1.7% and 11%.31 A review reported an 83.5% survival rate at 2 years after revascularization compared with only 57.2% survival in patients with CHF who were not revascularized.30 In general, morbidity and mortality tend to correlate inversely with EF and directly with NYHA functional class. Additional factors predisposing patients to greater morbidity and mortality include advanced age, female sex, hypertension, diabetes, and emergent operations32 (see Chapter 18). The decreases in morbidity and mortality after revascularization in this high-risk population in recent years are at least partially attributable to improvements in surgical technique and myocardial protection, but the concurrent performance of mitral valve repair and ventricular reshaping address the adverse ventricular loading conditions present and also may contribute to improved outcomes. The results of ongoing clinical trials evaluating combinations of surgical procedures (e.g., revascularization plus ventricular reshaping vs. revascularization alone) are discussed in detail later.
The importance of determining the viability of myocardium in the area to be revascularized cannot be overstated because the potential for recovery of function depends on residual contractile reserve, integrity of the sarcolemma, and metabolically preserved cellular function.31 Methods to detect viable myocardium include dobutamine stress echocardiography, single-photon emission computed tomography, positron emission tomography, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (see Chapters 1 and 2). Although dobutamine stress echocardio-graphy often has been shown to have the greatest predictive accuracy,33 important limitations need to be taken into account. Dobutamine stress echocardiography does not demonstrate viability directly, but improvement in mechanical contraction under pharmacologic stimulation. An example for a false-negative result can be seen if there is loss of contractile proteins in the presence of preserved function of the muscle fiber membrane.31 Some centers report using only the intraoperative assessment of myocardial wall thickness and contractility to determine potential viability with revascularization of the target region.34 Regardless of the specific method used, the important point is that there needs to be viable tissue to revascularize, and the best results will be obtained in properly selected individuals. Overwhelmingly, encouraging results worldwide suggest that, when feasible, revascularization is of benefit and provides survival advantage to patients with significant ventricular dysfunction.
Correction of Mitral Regurgitation
The mitral valve is a complex apparatus consisting of the anterior and posterior leaflets, the mitral annulus, the chordae tendineae, the papillary muscles, and the wall of the left ventricle. The posterior portion of the annulus is only rudimentarily developed and flexible. This explains why this portion of the annulus is prone to dilation during pathologic volume-overloaded states and mandates some form of mechanical stabilization when surgical valve repair is undertaken. The normal annulus has a three-dimensional (3D) saddle shape that is exacerbated during systole because of apical displacement of the commissures.35 In addition, the aortic root bulges posteriorly during systole. These dynamic phenomena lead to the ability of the annulus to change its shape during the cardiac cycle. During systole, an elliptical shape is assumed that facilitates coaptation of the leaflets. During diastole, a more circular form increases orifice dimensions, decreasing resistance to LV inflow.36 Consequently, the LV free wall, papillary muscles, and chordae play an important role in the competence of the valve, as well as in LV function during systole.
The mechanism responsible for mitral regurgitation can best be understood by utilizing the Carpentier classification (Table 27-3). This classification describes the motion of the mitral leaflets and position of the coaptation zone relative to the annular plane. The mitral regurgitation seen in patients with CHF is most often functional, primarily because of apical displacement of the papillary muscles resulting in tethering of the leaflets leading to systolic restriction of leaflet motion (type IIIb).
Carpentier Class | Leaflet Motion | Typical Pathology |
---|---|---|
Type I | Normal leaflet motion | Annular dilation, leaflet perforation |
Type II | Excessive leaflet motion | Leaflet prolapse or flail, chordal rupture or elongation |
Type IIIa | Restricted leaflet motion | Rheumatic leaflet(s), thickened or fused leaflets or chordae |
Type IIIb | Restricted leaflet motion | Papillary muscle displacement/dysfunction (dilated cardiomyopathy or ischemic) |
From Carpentier A, Chauvaud S, Fabiani JN, et al: Reconstructive surgery of mitral valve incompetence: Ten-year appraisal. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 79:338, 1980.
Historically, many physicians considered mitral regurgitation advantageous for the failing left ventricle. It was believed that a low-pressure atrial “pop off” allowed the failing ventricle to protect itself from the high afterload of the systemic circulation and gave the illusion that the heart had a better overall contractile state than really existed. This misconception was “supported” by the fact that surgical replacement of the mitral valve was associated with a very high mortality rate in patients with depressed LV function.37
Romano and Bolling’s38 work disproved this misconception, showing that despite increased operative risk, mitral valve repair or replacement was beneficial to patients with severely depressed LV function, CHF, and mitral regurgitation. Operative mortality rates of 5% were reported, with 1- and 2-year survival rates of 80% and 70%, respectively.38 Not only was long-term mortality reduced, but the increase in LV systolic function (on average by 10%) enabled a downgrading of NYHA class and resulted in an improved quality of life (see Chapter 19).
Although the majority of patients with end-stage HF will exhibit functional mitral regurgitation (as discussed earlier), there may be additional concurrent valvular pathology present in a given patient. An intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) evaluation of the valvular anatomy, the mechanism of the mitral regurgitation, and direct surgical inspection will determine the feasibility of repair. Data obtained from patients suffering from organic mitral valve regurgitation have been extrapolated to the functional mitral regurgitation group in the belief that valve repair is preferable to valve replacement, because there are demonstrated hemodynamic advantages associated with preservation of the subvalvular apparatus,39 and long-term anticoagulation is not required. However, review of the literature cannot unequivocally support this assumption. Magne et al40 were unable to show a survival advantage between MV repair and replacement in patients with ischemic mitral regurgitation. Gillinov et al41 showed that a survival benefit could be obtained by repairing the mitral valve as opposed to replacing it, especially in lower-risk patients. However, in high-risk patients, defined as patients with extremely low EF and dilated ventricles, this survival benefit was lost, prompting them to recommend MV replacement.41 Braun et al42 showed that end-diastolic diameter larger than 65 mm was associated with poorer survival in 108 patients undergoing restrictive mitral annuloplasty and CABG. Reverse remodeling was seen in all patients with end-diastolic diameter smaller than 65 mm; however, it was seen in only 25% with end-diastolic diameter larger than 65 mm, making them question whether MV repair/CABG is justified in grossly dilated ventricles. Most likely a ventricular solution will need to be considered in this subset of patients.
A common dilemma that is encountered by the perioperative team is what to do with a patient with ischemic cardiomyopathy and moderate mitral regurgitation. In the setting of severe mitral regurgitation, most would agree to perform concurrent mitral regurgitation repair, and in the setting of mild mitral regurgitation, to leave the mitral valve dysfunction unaddressed. Penicka et al’s43 study potentially could help shed light on this topic. They found improvement in moderate ischemic mitral regurgitation only in patients in whom viable myocardium in the region of the papillary muscles could be identified by preoperative single-photon emission computed tomographic testing. Patients with nonviable myocardium and dyssynchrony between the papillary muscles showed postoperative worsening of ischemic mitral regurgitation. Consequently, the authors argued to perform annuloplasty in all patients with nonviable myocardium and perform isolated CABG in patients with viable myocardium.43
The primary repair technique in the setting of type IIIb dysfunction consists of downsized annuloplasty. Although much debate exists regarding whether the annuloplasty should be performed with the aid of a complete semirigid ring or band, most experts agree that the annulus needs to be remodeled and stabilized. Although this technique results in excellent short-term results, most surgeons realize that addressing a ventricular problem at the annular level cannot represent the ideal solution. Magne et al44 showed that the use of annuloplasty rings eliminated severe mitral regurgitation; however, this was at the cost of leaving patients with functional mitral stenosis. One valvular disorder could be exchanged for another by undersizing the annulus (see Chapter 19).
After the procedure, TEE is used to assess the adequacy of the repair and potential improvement of overall cardiac function. Often, hemodynamic improvement is not immediately apparent, and TEE is used to optimize preload and guide pharmacologic interventions (see Chapters 12 to 14, 32, and 34).
Left Ventricular Restoration
In 1985, building on work by Cooley, Jatene, and others,45–47 Dor et al introduced a ventricular reshaping procedure intended to improve systolic performance by excluding akinetic/dyskinetic and aneurysmal portions of the left ventricle with a circular stitch at the transitional zone between contractile and noncontractile myocardium. A small patch was used within the ventricular cavity as needed to reestablish ventricular wall continuity at the level of the purse-string suture.48
This procedure generally was performed in conjunction with revascularization (and included mitral repair/replacement as needed) and thus helped establish important principles for a surgical ventricular restoration: revascularization of ischemic myocardium, decreasing of ventricular volume, and the restoration of ventricular shape. A subsequent publication by the same group described the results of this procedure in 130 patients (35% of whom had “heart failure” as the indication for the operation) and reported a 6% in-hospital mortality rate and a 3% late mortality rate because of recurrence of cardiac failure.49
In 1996, Batista et al50 introduced a procedure for the reshaping of the nonischemic, dilated, and failing left ventricle of NYHA Class IV patients through resection of a wedge of normal myocardium from the LV apex to the base (laterally, between the papillary muscles). This “partial left ventriculectomy” restored more normal ventricular geometry and decreased wall tension. Functional mitral regurgitation also was addressed during the Batista procedure by a mitral valve replacement or repair. Although many patients did benefit initially from this procedure (reduction of NYHA functional class to NYHA Class I in 57% and NYHA Class II in 33.3%),51 perioperative mortality was high (20% in both Batista’s own series and in the large Cleveland Clinic experience).51,52 In addition, the experience of several centers was that many patients required rescue mechanical circulatory assistance after the procedure, and many patients experienced a redilatation of their left ventricle resulting in a return to NYHA Class IV status.53–55 Thus, despite the short-lived period of initial enthusiasm in the mid- to late-1990s, the Batista procedure essentially has been abandoned. The concept of ventricular reshaping, however, remains of interest.
The modified Dor procedure (endoventricular circular patch plasty) has been used successfully to reshape large, dilated, spherical left ventricles of patients who have had an anterior wall myocardial infarction (MI) with resulting aneurysm and akinesis/dyskinesis. Essentially, a Dacron patch is placed within the LV cavity to exclude the large akinetic/dyskinetic area of the anterior wall. This restores LV geometry to a more normal elliptical shape and improves systolic function. When performed concurrently with CABG, significant early and late improvements in both NYHA functional class and EF have been demonstrated, with an in-hospital mortality rate of 12%.56,57 A trial of 439 patients undergoing this procedure found an improved in-hospital mortality rate of 6.6% and an 18-month survival rate of 89.2%. In this series, CABG was performed concurrently in 89%, mitral valve repair in 22%, and mitral valve replacement in 4%.58
Surgical ventricular restoration is the modern name for a modified Dor procedure, in which, in addition to exclusion of the akinetic aneurysmal segment of the anterior and/or septal wall and revascularization, a sizing balloon (or other sizer) is used to create an elliptical left ventricle of 30% to 40% smaller volume than baseline. Despite a worldwide surgical ventricular restoration database already in place including more than 5000 surgical ventricular restoration patients, a randomized, controlled trial was designed named “The Surgical Treatment for Heart failure (STICH),” with the intention to scientifically prove the efficacy of this procedure as an adjunct to revascularization. The results of this important trial have been eagerly awaited for years. Unfortunately, STICH did not demonstrate that the addition of surgical ventricular restoration to revascularization was associated with a greater improvement in symptoms or exercise tolerance, or with a reduction in the rate of death or hospitalization for cardiac causes when compared with revascularization alone.59 The negative results from this trial have caused much controversy and the validity questioned.60 Noted areas of concern revolve around participant eligibility for anatomic reasons, lack of standardized volumetric assessments in large numbers of participants, and alteration of the primary objective after trial commencement. In essence, the expert opinion is that the STICH trial was “well conceived, but poorly executed.” At the time of this writing, surgical ventricular restoration continues to be performed for true LV aneurysms but has fallen out of favor as a routine adjunct for the dilated end-stage left ventricle.
Cirillo’s61 recent publication described a further modification of the Dor concept wherein the shape and orientation of the patch, as well as the manner of suturing, ostensibly maintained more physiologic orientation of the myocardial fibers. Named the “KISS” procedure (Keep fIbers orientation with Strip patch reShaping), this methodology reportedly allowed for a return of normal apical rotation and ventricular torsion to optimize systolic performance. Long-term results of this new approach await further study.
Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy and Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillators
The progression of disease resulting in advanced cardiac failure is typically accompanied by conduction defects and arrhythmias, and pacemakers and implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) are common in this population. In addition to the well-known defects in sinus or atrioventricular node function, intraventricular conduction defects delay the onset of RV or LV systole in 30% to 50% of patients with advanced HF.62,63 This lack of coordination of LV and RV contractions further impairs CO64–67 and has been reported to increase the risk for death in this population68,69 (see Chapters 4 and 25).
Studies have shown that atrial-synchronized biventricular pacing (pacing the left and right ventricles in a carefully timed manner) can resynchronize RV and LV contraction, improving CO and overall hemodynamics. This enhances these patients’ ability to exercise, which improves their NYHA functional class, and decreases the length and frequency of their hospitalizations, which improves their quality of life.70–74
Sudden death from ventricular fibrillation accounts for approximately 350,000 deaths annually in the United States.1 Patients with advanced HF experience ventricular fibrillation with a frequency six to nine times that of the general population,1 and ventricular fibrillation causes 40% of all deaths in this population even in the absence of apparent disease progression based on symptoms.75 Thus, ICDs commonly are indicated for patients with advanced cardiac failure. An ICD is a device capable of arrhythmia detection and automatic defibrillation. ICDs successfully terminate ventricular fibrillation in greater than 98% of episodes, and studies have demonstrated that an ICD increases survival and decreases the risk for sudden death in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy and decreased LV function.76–78
The COMPANION trial (Comparison of Medical Therapy, Pacing, and Defibrillation in Heart Failure) studied 1500 patients with NYHA Class III/IV HF, a QRS interval of greater than 120 milliseconds, PR interval greater than 150 milliseconds, and an LVEF less than or equal to 35%. Compared with optimal pharmacologic therapy alone, CRT decreased the risk of the combined end point of death from or hospitalization for HF by 34%. The combination of CRT and ICD implantation reduced these risks by 40%.79
The CARE-HF (Cardiac Resynchronization in Heart Failure) trial enrolled 800 patients with NYHA Class III/IV HF, a QRS interval of more than 150 milliseconds, a QRS interval of more than 120 milliseconds with echocardiographic evidence of dyssynchrony, and an LVEF of 35% or less. Compared with optimal medical therapy alone, CRT (without ICD functionality) reduced all-cause mortality by 36%. In addition, CRT showed significant improvement of cardiac dyssynchrony, ventricular function, and mitral regurgitation based on echocardiographic criteria.68
Most recent guidelines give a Class I recommendation for placement of a CRT device with or without ICD in patients with LVEF ≤ 35%, QRS ≥ 120 milliseconds, presence of sinus rhythm, and NYHA Class III/IV symptoms on optimal medical therapy.80 However, two recent trials have investigated the effects of CRT on patients with NYHA Class I/II HF. The REVERSE trial (Resynchronization Reverses Remodeling in Systolic Left Ventricular Dysfunction) randomized 610 NYHA Class I/II patients with QRS ≥ 120 milliseconds and LVEF ≤ 40% to receive a CRT device (±ICD) that was either active (CRT-ON) or disabled (CRT-OFF). This study showed a significant delay in time to first hospitalization and improvement in measures of LV remodeling in the CRT-ON group.81 The MADIT-CRT trial (Multicenter Automatic Defibrillator Implantation Trial–Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy) randomized 1820 NYHA Class I/II patients with QRS ≥ 130 milliseconds and LVEF ≤ 30% to receive CRT and ICD or ICD alone. The CRT-ICD group had a significant 41% decrease in risk for first HF event, significant reduction in LV volumes, and increase in LVEF as compared with the ICD only group.82 Thus, although CRT previously has been about reduction in symptoms, it is anticipated that results such as those reported from MADIT-CRT will lead to an increased utilization of CRT in relatively asymptomatic patients with developing HF to prevent the progression of the disease.
Mechanical circulatory support
Ventricular Assist Devices: Implementation of Support
VADs can be used to take over the pumping function of the failing ventricle and provide effective CO to the arterial circulation downstream from the failing ventricle. In the case of the failing right ventricle, a right ventricular assist device (RVAD) can divert the deoxygenated venous return to the heart and pump it directly to the pulmonary arterial circulation. In the case of the failing left ventricle, a left ventricular assist device (LVAD) can divert the oxygenated blood returning to the left side of the heart and pump it directly into the aorta. Figure 27-1 demonstrates common cannulation strategies in the heart and great vessels by which MCS is implemented. Although there are a few notable exceptions (discussed later), these basic cannulation strategies are common to all manufacturers’ devices currently in use, regardless of the type of output they produce.
Mechanical Circulatory Support: Modern Practice
In prior years, VADs were regarded as either a last-ditch hope for recovery after an acute cardiac event that resulted in refractory cardiogenic shock (“bridge-to-recovery”), or as a “bridge-to-transplantation” for patients with chronic HF who were doing poorly. This has all changed now. More widespread acceptance of MCS, the recognition that outcomes are better when the support is instituted earlier rather than later, the development and use of risk scores to appropriately select patients and support strategies,83–94 the demonstration that there is often significant improvement in multiorgan function during the time spent on VAD support,95–97 the advent of new and improved devices, and a substantially decreased rate of VAD-associated complications98–101 have allowed for an increased and an improved clinical utilization of this life-saving technology in the management of both acute and chronic HF.
Short-Term Ventricular Assist Device Use
Early experience also demonstrated that specific patient conditions or comorbidities (Table 27-4) potentially increased the risk for complications during VAD support or made support difficult to implement. It also was proposed that patients who were not potential transplant candidates should probably not be considered for VAD support. Finally, it commonly was believed for many years that patients unlikely to survive regardless of the reestablishment of effective systemic perfusion should probably not even be considered for temporary VAD support. However, society currently demands that everyone (no matter how critically ill) be given an opportunity to recover, and the new and improved MCS technology is often now used with the understanding that improvement in clinical status will allow for a continuation of support, whereas a worsening of the clinical picture will prompt a discontinuation of support. Nevertheless, it is the advancements of the technology and an increased patient management experience that have brought a new flexibility to the arena of short-term MCS.
BSA, body surface area; ESLD, end stage liver disease; ESRD, end stage renal disease.
Figure 27-2 The Tandem Heart percutaneous Ventricular Assist Device (pVAD).
(Courtesy of CardiacAssist Inc., Pittsburgh, PA.)
Figure 27-5 The Thoratec pVAD (percutaneous ventricular assist device).
(Reproduced from Thoratec Corporation, Pleasanton, CA.)
Bridge-to-Immediate Survival
Since the late 1960s, the IABP has been the most commonly used “bridge-to-immediate survival” because it simultaneously increases myocardial O2 supply and decreases O2 demand, interrupting the otherwise inexorable cycle leading to ventricular failure. It is estimated that 5% to 10% of patients will experience development of cardiogenic shock after an acute MI, and early survival rates for these patients are on the order of 5% to 21%.102 However, 75% of such patients who are unresponsive to pharmacologic interventions will exhibit hemodynamic improvement with IABP therapy alone,103 and early survival rates in these patients are reported to approach 93% when treated with IABP counterpulsation.104
Although a balloon pump can improve the output from an acutely stunned ventricle, it only can augment forward CO by about 25% to 30% at maximum depending on the afterload,105,106 and it is clear that there will be no augmentation of forward CO if there is a complete absence of LV function; thus, by itself, an IABP cannot be expected to rescue a patient from catastrophic myocardial failure (see Chapter 32).
The TandemHeart pVAD
Centrifugal pumps long have been used as MCS via both intrathoracic and percutaneous femoral cannulation strategies.107 Although standard intrathoracic cannulations require sternotomy, percutaneous femoral arterial and venous cannulations can be performed outside of an operating room setting. A disadvantage of femoral venous cannulation, however, is that ventricular decompression is often inadequate to substantially reduce myocardial oxygen demand.
With this device, a 21-French venous inflow cannula is percutaneously advanced retrograde from the femoral vein through the right atrium and across the interatrial septum into the left atrium (see Figure 27-2); 2.5 to 5 L/min of continuous, nonpulsatile outflow from the centrifugal device is returned to the femoral artery to support the circulation. Heparinization to an ACT of 180 to 200 seconds is used during support. Although a theoretical downside to cannulation of the femoral artery for device outflow is retrograde arterial perfusion through the potentially diseased aorta of a patient with atherosclerosis, cerebral embolism has not been reported as a significant problem.
The primary use of this innovative device has thus far been as a margin of safety in high-risk patients undergoing a variety of high-risk percutaneous coronary interventions.108–110 Recent publications document the utility of the TandemHeart as a “bridge-to-immediate survival” from cardiogenic shock after acute MI,111 after postcardiotomy failure to wean from CPB,112 and in cases of acute myocarditis.113