2. Actual long-term survival of 426 elderly, 75-90
year old patients with severe aortic stenosis who
underwent AVR surgery is vastly superior to
survival of those similarly afflicted patients without
AVR surgery; and their survival rates are also
significantly superior to expected survival of age and
gender-adjusted general population control group.
3. ACC/AHA 2006 Guidelines
in Bonow (2006) for
management of aortic stenosis disease should be
revised to recommend preemptive early AVR
surgery when aortic stenosis disease has progressed
to their defined “severe” level regardless of whether
the patient is symptomatic or asymptomatic.
4. Mortality risk from just a single month of
watchful waiting after onset of aortic stenosis
symptoms equates or exceeds the 30-day 1% to 2%
operative mortality risk from Isolated AVR surgery.
5. Onset of symptoms from aortic stenosis disease
is often masked causing delayed detection. Also,
symptoms are sometimes mistaken for benign
effects of ageing, and are sometimes not promptly
communicated to the monitoring cardiologist. Such
delays increase mortality risk by 2% per month, one
month of which equates or exceeds the 1% to 2%
operative mortality risk of Isolated AVR surgery.
6. ASAS patients should be thoroughly apprised of
the vastly superior probable survival from early
AVR surgery compared to the more risky watchful-
waiting protocol. Moreover, advanced age should,
by itself, never be reason to preclude AVR surgery.
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