Systematic preoperative CT scan is associated with reduced risk of stroke in minimally invasive mitral valve surgery: A meta-analysis.
Review
Overview
abstract
BACKGROUND: Minimally invasive mitral valve surgery (MIMVS) is performed with increasing frequency. However, patients undergoing MIMVS might be at increased risk of perioperative stroke, mainly due to retrograde aortic embolization during femoral cardio-pulmonary bypass. Pre-operative computed tomography (CT) screening allows visualization of the aorta and femoro-iliac vessels and individualization of the surgical approach. In this meta-analysis, we aim to determine if systematic pre-operative CT screening is associated with decreased incidence of post-operative stroke and other complications following MIMVS. METHODS: A comprehensive review was performed in PubMed (inception-May 2018). Eligible studies included those which reported on MIMVS (mini-thoracotomy, port access or robotic approach) with retrograde arterial perfusion. Studies were separated into two subgroups: systematic pre-operative CT screening (CT-group) and no CT screening (Non-CT). Pooled event rates (PER) for operative mortality, post-operative stroke, perioperative myocardial infarction (MI), and new onset renal failure requiring dialysis were estimated and inter-group comparisons were performed. RESULTS: Data from 57 studies (13,731 patients) were analyzed (19 CT-group, 38 Non-CT). PER for post-operative stroke was 2.0% with a statistically significant difference between the groups (CT-group: 1.5% versus Non-CT: 2.2%, P = 0.03). PER for new dialysis was 1.9%, significantly lower in the CT-group (0.8% versus 2.3% in the Non-CT group, P = 0.02). PER for operative mortality was 1.4% with a trend towards better outcomes in the CT-group (0.8% versus 1.6% in the Non-CT group, P = 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Systematic pre-operative CT screening is associated with lower risk of post-operative stroke and need for dialysis and a trend toward lower operative mortality after MIMVS.