Journal article

Impact of prophylactic administration of Levosimendan on short-term and longterm outcome in high-risk patients with severely reduced left-ventricular ejection fraction undergoing cardiac surgery - a retrospective analysis


Authors listGrieshaber, Philippe; Lipp, Stella; Arnold, Andreas; Goerlach, Gerold; Wollbrueck, Matthias; Roth, Peter; Niemann, Bernd; Wilhelm, Jochen; Boening, Andreas

Publication year2016

JournalJournal of Cardiothoracic Surgery

Volume number11

eISSN1749-8090

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-016-0556-2

PublisherBioMed Central


Abstract

Background: Patients with severely reduced left-ventricular ejection fraction carry a high risk of morbidity and mortality after cardiac surgery. Levosimendan can be used prophylactically in these patients having shown positive effects on short-term outcome. However, effects on long-term outcome and patient subgroups benefiting the most are unknown. We aim to address these topics with real-life data from our clinical practice.

Methods: Two hundred eigthy eight patients with preoperative LVEF <= 35% underwent cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass between 2009 and 2013. Thereof, 246 were included in the matched analysis. Eigthy two patients received 12.5mg Levosimendan starting at induction of anesthesia. Outcomes of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (n = 103), isolated valve surgery/ascending aortic surgery (n = 45) and those undergoing combination procedures (n = 98) were analyzed separately. Additionally, multivariate regression analysis was conducted in order to identify predictors of short-term outcome parameters for different subgroups of patients.

Results: Thirty days mortality rates of 16% in the Levosimendan group and 21% in the control group (OR 0.7; 95%-CI 0.36-1.5; p = 0.37) were observed. Levosimendan showed a positive effect on postoperative renal function. A higher rate of new-onset atrial fibrillation (OR 4.0; 95%-CI 2.2-7-2; p < 0.0001) was observed in the Levosimendan group. Follow-up until three years postoperatively showed no differences in long-term survival between the groups.

Conclusion: Prophylactic administration of Levosimendan did not affect overall short-and long-term outcomes. The value of prophylactic use of Levosimendan remains questionable and more data is needed to confirm subgroups that might benefit most.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGrieshaber, P., Lipp, S., Arnold, A., Goerlach, G., Wollbrueck, M., Roth, P., et al. (2016) Impact of prophylactic administration of Levosimendan on short-term and longterm outcome in high-risk patients with severely reduced left-ventricular ejection fraction undergoing cardiac surgery - a retrospective analysis, Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery, 11, Article 162. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-016-0556-2

APA Citation styleGrieshaber, P., Lipp, S., Arnold, A., Goerlach, G., Wollbrueck, M., Roth, P., Niemann, B., Wilhelm, J., & Boening, A. (2016). Impact of prophylactic administration of Levosimendan on short-term and longterm outcome in high-risk patients with severely reduced left-ventricular ejection fraction undergoing cardiac surgery - a retrospective analysis. Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery. 11, Article 162. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-016-0556-2



Keywords


ACUTE KIDNEY INJURYBLOOD-FLOWCalcium sensitizerCardiac surgeryCARDIOPULMONARY BYPASSHEART-FAILUREHIGH-RISK PATIENTSINTRAVENOUS LEVOSIMENDANLEVOSIMENDANlow cardiac output syndromePERIOPERATIVE LEVOSIMENDAN

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:42