Nowadays many aortic valve prostheses are available in clinical
practice: mechanical, biological and human tissue prostheses. None of the
currently available prosthetic valves, however, approach the human valve
in terms of hemodynamic function and/or freedom from complications.
Mechanical prostheses have a longer durability and provide a generally
good hemodynamic function, but are thrombogenic, requiring permanent
anticoagulation with related risks in terms of morbidity and mortality
[1,2]. On the contrary, bioprostheses have a low thrombogenicity and do
not require anticoagulation. On the other hand, bioprosthetic valves have
the propensity to undergo structural degeneration, limiting their
durability and often necessitating reoperation. For these reasons
bioprosthetic valves are usually used in old patients, while mechanical
ones are preferred in young people. In any case, it should be recognized
that the choice in the individual patient is not simple.
Aortic valve replacement is one of the most frequently performed
cardiac surgery interventions in western countries and the proportion of
biological valves used in the aortic position can be as high as 70% in
patients over 70 years [3,4]. Moreover, given the increased age at
implantation of the commonly referred patients, the proportion of
biological prostheses is increasing. Thus, a medical therapy able to
reduce bioprosthetic valve structural degeneration would have an important
clinical and socio-economic impact.
It has been recently observed that hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A
reductase inhibitors might slow the progression of mild and moderate
stenosis or sclerosis in native aortic valves [5-7]. Several studies
suggested that atherosclerosis and aortic valve stenosis could be
considered simply different manifestations of the same disease [8-11]. In
a cholesterol-fed rabbit model, hypercholesterolemia induced
atherosclerotic-like lesions in the aortic valve tissue, and atorvastatin
reduced this phenomenon [12]. Furthermore, a number of retrospective,
non-randomized studies reported a possible effect of statins in slowing
progression of mild or moderate aortic stenosis in human native valves
[5-7]. Other studies [13,14] using electron-beam computed tomography
demonstrated a decreased rate of aortic valve calcium accumulation in
statin-treated patients. However, the real role of hydroxymethylglutaryl
coenzyme A reductase inhibitors is not yet clarified. The correlation
between cholesterol levels and aortic stenosis progression is still
controversial. Some studies [5,13] found a significant correlation, while
other ones [6,7] showed lack of correlation with aortic stenosis
progression. Also the hypothesis that statin benefits could be due to
their pleiothropic and anti-inflammatory properties has yet to be
demonstrated.
In addition, the last two studies on this topic, published this year,
did not confirm the positive effect of hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A
reductase inhibitors on aortic stenosis progression (Table 1) [15,16].
Cowell et al. [15] assessed aortic valve stenosis and calcification
progression with Doppler echocardiography and computed tomography, in a
prospective double-blind-controlled trial; patients were randomly assigned
to receive either atorvastatin or placebo. Their conclusion was that
intensive lipid-lowering therapy does not halt the progression of calcific
aortic stenosis or induce its regression. Our group [16] demonstrated a
positive effect of statins only in the subgroup of patients with aortic
valve sclerosis, suggesting that these drugs could be effective only in
the early phase of disease.
The problem of early calcification of bioprosthetic valves is well
known. Indeed, at the time of commercial manufacturing [17], a treatment
with the T6 (a detergent sodium dodecyl sulphate to retard calcification
[18]) is usually performed to remove the lipids from the porcine valve.
Nevertheless, it cannot prevent subsequent lipid insudation that may favor
calcification. Anyway, with T6 mitigation, dystrophic calcification may be
delayed until other factors come into play. Lipid insudation and monocyte
infiltrates occur in the cuspidal tissue of porcine bioprostheses as seen
in early atherosclerosis and can precipitate structural valve
deterioration in the long-term, even in the absence of mineralization
[19]. Bottio et al. hypothezised that lipids could play a role in the
structural valve deterioration of bioprostheses. In their study they
observed, by electron microscopy, lipid insudations in almost all the
explanted biological valves [20].
Farivar and Cohn [21] have recently suggested that hypercholesterolemia
could be considered a risk factor for bioprosthetic valve calcification
and explantation. They performed a retrospective cohort study on 144
patients who had bioprosthetic aortic or mitral valves removed. In a
subgroup of 66 patients they performed a case-control analysis of the
tissue valves explanted and compared them with an age- and
position-matched group of 66 patients with similar duration of
implantation. The mean serum cholesterol level in the explanted valve
group was significantly higher (189 vs 163 mg/dL, p < .0001) than that
of the group whose valves did not require explantation. This supports the
potential role of hypercholesterolemia as a risk factor for bioprosthetic
valve calcification requiring explantation. Similar results were found by
Nollert et al. [22]. In these two studies both aortic and mitral
bioprostheses were evaluated, but the role of statin treatment was not
addressed to.
David and Ivanov [23], analyzing two large databases from Stanford
University and Toronto General Hospital, did not confirm a role of
hyperlipidemia in predicting freedom from reoperation after aortic valve
replacement with bioprosthetic valves. However, the authors could not
exclude the hypothesis that the probability of valve failure in patients
with risk factors for atherosclerosis was reduced because most of them
were actually taking statins.
Our group was the first one to observe a positive effect of statins on
reducing the progression of bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration
[24,25]. In order to assess whether statins play a role in slowing
degeneration of bioprosthetic aortic valves we have retrospectively
selected from our 15-years database (1988 --2002) all the patients with
bioprosthetic aortic valves having at least 2 echocardiographic
examinations at least 6 months apart. There were 167 patients (97 men,
mean age 71 [plus minus] 9 years at the first examination), followed for
46 [plus minus] 38 months. During follow-up, 22 patients (13%) were
treated with statins, while 145 (87%) were not. There were no differences
between the two groups regarding age, gender, follow-up duration, baseline
peak aortic velocity, mean gradient, effective orifice area, degree of
aortic regurgitation, and left ventricular ejection fraction. As expected,
statin-treated patients had a significantly higher prevalence of
documented hypercholesterolemia, proven coronary artery disease, and
associated coronary artery bypass surgery (p < 0.001 for each). There
were no significant differences between the two groups in prosthetic size,
or prosthetic type (stented vs stentless, or porcine vs pericardial
valves). The annual rate of increase in peak prosthetic velocity was lower
in statin-treated patients (0.038 [plus minus] 0.074 vs. 0.140 [plus
minus] 0.228 m/sec/year, p < 0.001). The annual rates of decrease in
prosthetic effective orifice area (0.031 [plus minus] 0.052 vs 0.100 [plus
minus] 0.150 cm2/year) and indexed effective orifice area
(0.019 [plus minus] 0.031 vs 0.056 [plus minus] 0.086
cm2/m2/year) were also lower in statin-treated
patients (p < 0.001 for both) (Figure 1). Worsening of aortic
regurgitation was found in 2/22 (9.1%) in the statin group and in 48/145
(33.1%) of controls (p = 0.022). The existence of either a rate of
increase in peak velocity [greater-than-or-equal] 0.3 m/s/year or
worsening of aortic regurgitation [greater-than-or-equal] 1/3 degree was
found in 2/22 (9.1%) of statin-treated and in 63/145 (43.4%) of
non-treated patients (p = 0.002) (Odds ratio with statin treatment: 0.13;
95% CI, 0.03 --0.58). The overall annual rate of progression in peak
prosthetic velocity was similar between porcine and pericardial valves and
between stented and stentless valves. The only factor associated with a
lower progression of bioprosthetic aortic valve failure was statin
treatment. During follow-up, there was no difference in major clinical
event occurrence between the two groups. No significant adverse effects of
statin treatment were recorded during follow-up. Our study was the first
one to provide evidence that statin treatment is associated with
significantly less bioprosthetic aortic valve failure, opening a new field
for clinical research. It should be recognized, however, that there are
several limitations: given the small number of patients with different
types of bioprostheses on statins, a meaningful subgroup analysis of the
differences in outcome between different types of biological prostheses
was not possible. Because of the retrospective nature of the study and
because of the inclusion period, complete information regarding lipid
profile was not available. Therefore, we could not test for a relation
between changes in lipid profile and bioprosthetic aortic valve
degeneration, and so the mechanism of statin treatment benefit in this
setting remains speculative.
Rosenhek et al. [26], in a preliminary report, did not confirm the
positive effect of hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors
on aortic valve bioprostheses. A possible explanation for a lack of effect
of statin treatment in this study is the rather short follow-up (28 [plus
minus] 17 months), as it would be sound to expect a benefit of statin
treatment in this setting after a longer period. Another explanation could
be the use of only peak transprosthetic velocity and lack of inclusion of
aortic regurgitation as a measure of hemodynamic deterioration of
bioprosthetic aortic valves in their study. In two studies, Skowasch et
al. have recently supported the hypothesis of the inflammatory process
affecting aortic valve bioprostheses and the pleiotropic effects of
statins in these patients. In one study [27], they analyzed the endstage
degenerative aortic valve tissue from native valve of 57 consecutive
patients, tissue from aortic porcine degenerated bioprostheses of 24
patients and tissue from 5 non-stenosed native control valves; the serum
C-reactive protein levels were also measured preoperatively. They found
C-reactive protein more frequently in bioprostheses than in native valves.
Also the serum C-reactive protein levels increased in patients with aortic
valve bioprostheses showing a significant correlation with the valvular
inflammatory process. Valvular C-reactive protein expression and serum
C-reactive protein levels were found to be lower in the group of patients
with a statin treatment than in the group without it suggesting possible
pleiotropic and/or anti-inflammatory properties of these molecules. In
another study [28], the same authors analyzed aortic valves from patients
with non-rheumatic aortic valve stenosis and with degenerative aortic
valve bioprostheses searching for the presence of endothelial progenitor
cells and leukocyte subtype-specific markers. These cells were detected in
a large series of degenerative aortic valves, more frequently in
bioprostheses than in native cusps. These findings suggest not only a
unifying pathogenic mechanism that underlies both types of valvular
degeneration, but also an even more important role of primarily
extravalvular cells in the case of prosthesis degeneration. In this work
on high-grade aortic stenosis, a significant relationship between
endothelial progenitor cell markers and statins, aspirin or ACE-inhibitors
was not found.
Aortic valve prostheses most often behave hemodynamically like a mildly
stenotic native valve and the pattern of flow through the valve is
similar. This mechanistic similarity of the hydrodynamic patterns could be
another explanation for a similar benefit of statins treatment in both
native and bioprosthetic aortic valves. On the other hand, statins exhibit
pleiotropic effects over and above lipid lowering, including
anti-inflammatory effects [29]. They retard extra-osseous calcifications,
as for coronary vessels [30], and decrease native aortic valve calcium
accumulation [13,14]. Of note, doses used in statin-treated patients in
our study were relatively low compared to currently used dosages. Because
of the submaximal doses the actual effect of statins might have been
underestimated. It is also noteworthy that statin-treated patients had a
reduced progression of bioprosthetic degeneration despite a higher number
of risk factors.
Wu et al. [31] recently evaluated the effect of statins on aortic valve
myofibroblasts and osteoblast calcification in vitro. Interestingly,
statins inhibited calcification in aortic valve myoblasts but
paradoxically they stimulated bone cell calcification in valve
osteoblasts. At implantation, bioprosthetic aortic valves represent "de
novo" structures, not yet affected by degenerative calcific process.
Theoretically, statins could be more effective in this subgroup of
patients with bioprotheses as compared to the general aortic native valve
population, where the degenerative process has already started and
osteoblasts are likely to be activated by statins.
Martinez-Gonzalez et al. [32] showed that human and porcine smooth
muscle cells share similar proliferation dependence on the mevalonate
pathway, inhibited by statins treatment. They concluded that the porcine
model closely resembles the human model and it may be suitable for testing
new treatment strategies in vivo. More recently, the same authors showed a
positive effect of statin treatment on vessel wall expression of a protein
involved in atherosclerotic lesion progression in a hypercholesterolemic
porcine model [33]. This could explain in part a similar positive effect
of statins in human and porcine valves.
In conclusion, treatment with statins could be associated with
significantly less degeneration of bioprosthetic aortic valves, but a
definitive proof is still awaited. The data from Cowell's study support
the hypothesis that intensive lipid-lowering therapy doesn't slow the
progression of the aortic stenosis of the native valve; but the same
author reinforce the need for a long-term and large-scale trial because
these were the limits of his investigations. The ASSIST study
(Asymptomatic aortic Sclerosis/Stenosis: Influence of STatins), an ongoing
study of the "Societa Italiana di Ecografia Cardiovascolare", is aiming to
create a large, prospective, observational investigation, involving many
Echocardiograpic laboratories and thousands of patients, in order to give
more definite answers from the real clinical world to this unsolved
question. A substudy of the ASSIST study on aortic biological prostheses
is also planned, in order to prospectively assess, in a large number of
patients, the potential role of this pharmacologic treatment in reducing
the rate of prostheses degeneration.