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The aorta is the principal arterial vessel arising from the left heart that transfers blood to the body. Certain genetic and familial disease processes are known to weaken the aortic wall resulting in dilation and potential rupture. These aortic complications carry high mortality (>25%) and current management is orientated towards early detection and preventive treatment. Aortic dilation can also result in aortic valve dysfunction leading to heart failure. The estimated UK incidence of aortic disease per year is around 10 per 100,000 individuals, with 2000 people per year dying from aortic complications.
The 2017-2020 National Adult Cardiac Surgery Audit report identified the number of people receiving surgery for aortic dissection in Scotland is per population proportionately lower compared to England (4.6 per million per year in Scotland vs. 6.6 per million per year in England). The reasons for this are unclear but may relate to the prevalence of aortic disease or a large geographic distribution with compromised access to specialized centres.
Currently surgery is recommended when the aortic diameter exceeds a certain threshold. There are several types of effective surgical procedures, but there is still limited information on their long-term outcomes and the advantage of one procedure over another.
The aims of the project are firstly to determine the clinical outcomes of the surgical procedures that are currently employed in Scotland to treat proximal aortic disease and secondly to describe the prevalence and distribution of proximal aortic disease within the Scottish population. The project will be hosted by the Golden Jubilee Research Institute. Contemporary and retrospective data will be collected from all the Scottish Cardiothoracic Surgery units which are based in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen.
This will be the first study to analyse surgical outcomes for ascending aortic disease in Scotland, and the first to describe the epidemiology of aortic disease within the population. It is anticipated that the results will guide current surgical practise, and provide data to inform national service provision for the management of proximal aortic disease.
Full description
The study has two principal aims:
This study will be the first to look at outcomes from a nation-wide cohort of patients following surgery of the thoracic aorta in the UK. The investigators anticipate that results from this study will inform future aortic practice and guide decisions on intervention timing and type.
Information on the prevalence and geographic distribution of aortic disease within Scotland will guide resource allocation and service configuration to allow equity in access to treatment. By raising awareness among the medical professionals and the wider community, the study should lead to improved recognition and better outcomes for patients with aortic disease.
Data will be recorded in a contemporary and retrospective manner for two patient cohorts:
Surgical cohort - Adult patients who have had a surgical intervention on the proximal aorta in the three Scottish Cardiothoracic Surgery units based in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen in the last 13 years (2008 - 2021).
Non-surgical cohort - Adult patients who have a diagnosis of proximal aortopathy, but have not had surgery. This cohort will be obtained from three sources:
The three data collection sites will be the Golden Jubilee National Hospital in Glasgow, the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary and Aberdeen Royal Infirmary.
The surgical cohort sample size is expected to be around 1300 patients. The non-surgical cohort is difficult to estimate, but around 500 cases yearly are expected to be identified. The research project will be hosted by the NHS Golden Jubilee Research Department.
The principal investigator (George Gradinariu) will undertake this research project as part of an postgraduate research programme (MD degree) at the University of Glasgow under the supervision of Professor Mark Danton (Congenital Cardiac Surgeon with interest in proximal aortic surgery), Professor Alex McConnachie Professor of Biostatistics, University of Glasgow) and Professor Faisal Ahmed (Samson Gemmell Chair of Child Health, University of Glasgow)
Statistical analysis will be overseen and supervised by Professor McConnachie. Descriptive statistics will be applied. Survival data will be analysed using Kaplan-Meier. Multivariable survival and logistic regression models will be used to identify variables predicting the risk of adverse outcomes. Predictive modelling to estimate the risk of adverse outcomes based on aortic root dimension will be assessed using ROC analysis. In comparing survival by procedures propensity matching will be used to minimize confounding. Analysis will be performed using R statistical analysis software (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria).
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Surgical cohort
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Non-surgical cohort
Inclusion Criteria:
1,662 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
George Gradinariu, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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