Background: Elevated concentrations of troponin T have prognostic impact in patients with various cardiovascular diseases including those with severe aortic stenosis. Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has improved prognosis for patients without a surgical option. Whether this affects the prognostic value of preinterventional troponin T remains unclear.
Methods: We therefore conducted a prospective study in 198 consecutive patients with subsequent, successful transfemoral TAVI and analyzed cardiac troponin T (cTnT) levels with a new generation, high-sensitive troponin T assay before and after TAVI, as well as their prognostic value after 12 months.
Results: Patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS) showed significant elevation of preinterventional cTnT levels. Postinterventional cTnT levels significantly rose further about sevenfold after transfemoral TAVI and peaked at day three until they steadily declined thereafter. Baseline renal function (P = 0.011), the duration of intraprocedural rapid pacing (P = 0.0012), and baseline cTnT (P = 0.0001) values predicted the magnitude of postinterventional cTnT elevations. Interestingly, Kaplan-Meier curve analysis revealed, that although cTnT levels were not predictive for short-term mortality, preinterventional as well as postinterventional peak cTnT showed prognostic value for 1-year mortality, regardless of successful TAVI.
Conclusions: Pre- and postinterventional hscTnT levels signal adverse 1-year mortality in patients with severe AS independent of successful aortic valve replacement.