Yale School of Medicine researchers are reporting that patients with mitral regurgitation, a type of valvular heart disease, are living longer after surgery.

Dodson and his team represent the NIH Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Center for Cardiovascular Outcomes Research (CCOR) at Yale University as well as the Yale University School of Medicine. They analyzed the 30-day and one-year mortality rate in 157,032 U.S. Medicare fee-for-service patients 65 years or older undergoing mitral valve surgery from 1999 to 2008.
"Mortality declined significantly at both 30 days and one year," said Dodson. "30-day mortality decreased from 8.1% to 4.2% from 1999 to 2008, a relative decline of 48%, while one-year mortality decreased from 15.3% in 1999 to 9.2% in 2008, a relative decline of 40%."
Dodson added that the overall rate of mitral valve surgery declined by 9% during the study period. Patients who were very elderly — 85 years of age or older — made up an increasing proportion of all patients undergoing mitral valve surgery (8.8% in 1999 to 12.7% in 2008). Surgery was also more commonly performed in male and white patients than in female and nonwhite patients.
"The marked reduction in mortality after mitral valve surgery over time is an encouraging trend for cardiac surgery," said Dodson. "Although our study was not designed to identify causes for the reduction in mortality, several factors may be responsible, including improved surgical techniques, and lower rates of post-operative complications."
"There remain differences in the rate of mitral valve surgery performed, and mortality outcomes, among sex and race subgroups that deserve further investigation," he added.
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