Abstract 11953: Aortic Stenosis Severity, Symptom Status, and Long-Term Outcomes
Matthew D Solomon, Thomas K Leong, Elisha Garcia, David Lange, Jacob Mishell, edward J mcnulty, Femi Philip, Andrew Rassi, Anthony N Demaria, Rick A Nishimura, Alan S Go, Andrew P Ambrosy- Physiology (medical)
- Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Introduction: The relationship between aortic stenosis (AS) severity, AS-related symptoms, and clinical outcomes is poorly understood.
Research Question: Does a history of AS-related symptoms at the time of diagnosis affect clinical outcomes including death and AS-related hospitalization?
Methods: Using a combination of natural language processing algorithms and administrative codes, we ascertained physician-assessed AS, AS severity, and AS-related symptoms (chest pain, acute coronary syndrome, syncope, presyncope, orthopnea, dyspnea, PND, and worsening heart failure) in the year prior or up to 60 days after an initial AS diagnosis among 602,821 adults with echocardiograms in a large, integrated health system from 2010-2019. We examined multivariable associations between AS severity and recent AS-related symptoms for the outcomes of death and AS-related hospitalizations using Cox models.
Results: Among 40,333 patients identified with incident AS, the majority had recent AS-related symptoms (mild: 80%, mild-moderate: 77%, moderate: 77%, moderate-severe: 85%, and severe AS: 87%). Patients with recent symptoms were older (mean [SD] age 78 [10] vs 75 [11] years; p<0.01), more likely female (51% vs 47%; p<0.01), and had a higher comorbidity burden. In unadjusted analyses, symptom status was a strong discriminator of risk over a median (IQR) of 2.2 (0.8-4.3) years of follow-up ( Figure ). After multivariable adjustment, AS-related symptoms remained strongly associated with death and AS-related hospitalization across the spectrum of AS severity, with moderate symptomatic patients having risk similar to severe asymptomatic patients.
Conclusions: The majority of patients diagnosed with AS have recent and/or active AS-related symptoms, which is associated with a significantly increased risk of adverse outcomes. Incorporating symptom status across the individual grades of AS may improve risk stratification beyond AS severity alone.