DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.126.081405 ISSN: 0009-7322

Advancing Quality in the Evaluation, Surveillance, and Management of Aortic Stenosis: A Report From the AHA Target: AS Registry

Brian R. Lindman, Linda D. Gillam, Elizabeth M. Perpetua, Sammy Elmariah, Catherine M. Otto, Marielle Scherrer-Crosbie, Patrick T. O’Gara, Martin B. Leon, Michael Mack, Vinod Thourani, Ty J. Gluckman, Harold L. Dauerman, Varsha Tanguturi, Olcay Aksoy, Sara O’Kane, Daniel Linn, Mariell Jessup, Gregg C. Fonarow, Clyde W. Yancy, Sreekanth Vemulapalli

BACKGROUND:

Undertreatment and delayed treatment of aortic stenosis (AS) are common, both of which are associated with increased mortality. Historically, assessment of quality for AS care has focused on peri- and postprocedural outcomes. The American Heart Association Target: AS registry is the first national registry to provide data and evaluate quality for upstream processes of care for patients with AS.

METHODS:

Randomly selected patients from 2023 and 2024 with moderate or severe AS from 58 sites in the Target: AS registry were included. The 2 primary quality measures were (1) timely diagnosis (percentage of patients with an echocardiogram consistent with possible severe AS who had all assessments to clarify AS severity and symptoms within 30 days) and (2) timely treatment (percentage of patients with a Class I indication for aortic valve replacement treated within 90 days). Secondary measures included documentation of key echocardiographic parameters in the report, clinical recommendations in the echocardiogram report summary, multidisciplinary heart valve team evaluation, guideline-based performance of multimodality testing, and timely surveillance echocardiograms.

RESULTS:

Among 8097 patients, 47% were women, 7% Black, 6% Hispanic, and 3% Asian. Timely diagnosis occurred in 54% in 2023, improving to 61% in 2024 ( P =0.027) with gaps caused by lack of timely symptom assessment (23% [2023]; 16% [2024]), lack of stroke volume index (35% [2023]; 18% [2024]), or lack of timely multimodality testing (87% [2023]; 75% [2024]). Among those with a Class I indication for aortic valve replacement, timely treatment occurred in 82% (2023) versus 85% (2024) ( P =NS). Multidisciplinary heart valve team evaluation occurred in 78% (2023) versus 84% (2024) ( P =0.008). Key findings in the echocardiography report were documented in 83% (2023) and 85% (2024) ( P =NS), but a clinical recommendation was included in <10% of the time. Timely surveillance echocardiograms for moderate (2 years) and severe AS (1 year) were not performed in ~40% of patients.

CONCLUSIONS:

The national American Heart Association Target: AS registry demonstrates opportunities for improvement in timely diagnosis, surveillance, and treatment for patients with AS at participating centers. By providing an infrastructure to measure performance and identify best practices, the Target: AS registry has the potential to elevate and optimize care and patient outcomes.

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