Aortic Stenosis Risk Score

Aortic Stenosis Risk Score

Main Risk Scores / Models Used in Aortic Stenosis

1. Surgical Risk Scores (used for TAVR/SAVR decision-making)

  • STS (Society of Thoracic Surgeons) Predicted Risk of Mortality (PROM) score
    • Estimates operative mortality and morbidity for surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR).
    • Widely used in North America.
  • EuroSCORE II (European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation)
    • Estimates mortality risk after cardiac surgery (including SAVR).
    • Used more in Europe.

๐Ÿ‘‰ These two are standard when evaluating if a patient is low-, intermediate-, or high-risk for surgery.


2. Risk Stratification in Asymptomatic Severe AS

For patients with severe AS but no symptoms, guidelines consider:

  • Clinical factors:
    • Age, frailty, comorbidities
    • Rapid symptom onset
  • Echocardiographic factors:
    • Peak aortic jet velocity (>5.0 m/s)
    • Mean gradient (>60 mmHg)
    • Valve area (<0.6 cmยฒ)
    • Severe LV hypertrophy, reduced LVEF (<50%)
  • Exercise testing:
    • Abnormal blood pressure response
    • Symptom provocation
  • Biomarkers:
    • Elevated BNP
    • Rapid rise in serial measurements

These arenโ€™t combined into a single numerical score, but guidelines (ACC/AHA, ESC) integrate them for decision-making.


3. TAVR-specific Risk Tools

  • FRANCE-2 risk model (mortality predictors after TAVR)
  • OBSERVANT risk score (Italy, TAVR outcomes)
  • TVT Registry models (US, predicts in-hospital/30-day mortality)

โœ… Summary for you:

  • There is no โ€œAortic Stenosis Risk Scoreโ€ like ADD-RS.
  • In practice, we use STS PROM or EuroSCORE II for surgical/TAVR decisions, plus clinical/echo criteria for asymptomatic severe AS.
  • Research models exist for TAVR risk, but not universally adopted.

Aortic Stenosis โ€” Risk Scoring & Decision MCQs (20)

Select the best answer. Correct option will be highlighted; explanation will display immediately.

1. The STS Predicted Risk of Mortality (PROM) is primarily used to:
A. Predict 30โ€‘day mortality after cardiac surgery
B. Diagnose severity of aortic stenosis
C. Estimate longโ€‘term prosthesis durability
D. Replace echocardiographic assessment
Answer: A. STS PROM estimates perioperative (30โ€‘day) risk of mortality/morbidity and is used in surgical risk assessment (SAVR vs TAVR decisions).
2. EuroSCORE II is best described as:
A. A biomarker for myocardial stress
B. A surgical risk model for cardiac operations
C. A valve area calculation method
D. A grading system for aortic calcification
Answer: B. EuroSCORE II predicts operative mortality for cardiac surgery using demographic and clinical variables.
3. Which echocardiographic parameter alone defines severe aortic stenosis according to most guidelines?
A. Valve area <1.5 cmยฒ
B. Mean gradient >20 mmHg
C. Peak aortic jet velocity >4.0 m/s
D. LVEF <50%
Answer: C. Peak aortic jet velocity >4.0 m/s is one of the primary criteria for severe AS (also mean gradient >40 mmHg or aortic valve area <1.0 cmยฒ).
4. In an asymptomatic patient with severe AS, which finding would most strongly favor early intervention?
A. Age <60 years alone
B. Peak velocity 4.3 m/s with preserved EF
C. Rapid progression of peak velocity (>0.3 m/s per year)
D. Mild mitral regurgitation
Answer: C. Rapid haemodynamic progression (e.g., >0.3 m/s per year) or very high peak velocity, reduced EF, or very severe valve area may prompt earlier intervention even if asymptomatic.
5. Which of the following increases the STS Predicted Risk of Mortality most significantly?
A. Wellโ€‘controlled diabetes on diet
B”>B. Emergency/salvage operation
C. Mild COPD
D. Stable prior PCI
Answer: B. Urgent/emergency or salvage operations and critical preโ€‘operative states are major drivers of increased surgical mortality risk.
6. A low transvalvular gradient with low flow but small valve area describes:
A. High-gradient severe AS
B”>B. Paradoxical lowโ€‘flow, lowโ€‘gradient severe AS
C. Pseudoโ€‘normal AS
D. Aortic regurgitation
Answer: B. Paradoxical lowโ€‘flow, lowโ€‘gradient severe AS occurs with small valve area but low gradients due to low stroke volume despite preserved EF in some patients.
7. Which biomarker is commonly used to help riskโ€‘stratify patients with AS?
A. Troponin I only
B”>B. Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP)
C. Cโ€‘reactive protein
D. Creatine kinase
Answer: B. BNP (or NTโ€‘proBNP) rises with increased LV wall stress and correlates with symptom development and prognosis in AS.
8. Which patient characteristic would most increase EuroSCORE II predicted mortality?
A. Young age (45 years)
B”>B. Female sex
C. Active endocarditis
D. NYHA I symptoms
Answer: C. Active endocarditis, critical state, and other urgent/emergent features increase operative risk substantially in EuroSCORE II.
9. For TAVR candidate selection, which is NOT typically considered?
A. Vascular access feasibility
B”>B. Frailty and life expectancy
C. Prosthesis durability beyond 20 years
D. Anatomical suitability on CT (annulus size)
Answer: C. While durability matters, predicting prosthesis durability beyond decades is uncertain and less central than access, anatomy, frailty, and comorbidities when selecting TAVR.
10. A patient with severe AS and left ventricular ejection fraction 40% should:
A. Never be considered for valve intervention
B”>B. Be considered for AVR because reduced EF (<50%) is an indication
C. Only receive medical therapy
D. Undergo immediate CABG instead
Answer: B. Reduced LVEF (<50%) in severe AS is a guideline indication for aortic valve replacement even if symptoms are absent, because LV dysfunction may be due to afterload mismatch from AS.
11. The common threshold for high surgical risk in STS PROM is approximately:
A. <1%
B”>B. 1โ€“3%
C. 4โ€“8%
D. >8%
Answer: D. Historically, >8% STS PROM has been used to define high surgical risk, though decision-making is individualized and thresholds have evolved with TAVR data.
12. In lowโ€‘flow, lowโ€‘gradient AS with reduced EF, which test helps distinguish true severe AS from pseudoโ€‘severe AS?
A. Dobutamine stress echocardiography
B”>B. Coronary angiography
C. Chest Xโ€‘ray
D. BNP level alone
Answer: A. Lowโ€‘dose dobutamine echo assesses contractile reserve and changes in valve area/gradient to differentiate true severe from pseudoโ€‘severe AS.
13. Which comorbidity commonly increases both perioperative mortality and the likelihood of choosing TAVR over SAVR?
A. Wellโ€‘controlled hypertension
B”>B. Severe frailty and limited life expectancy
C. Mild hyperlipidaemia
D. Prior appendectomy
Answer: B. Frailty and limited life expectancy increase operative risk and often influence a decision toward less invasive TAVR when appropriate.
14. Which imaging modality is essential for procedural planning before TAVR?
A. CT angiography of the aortic root and vasculature
B”>B. Plain chest radiograph only
C. PET scan
D. EEG
Answer: A. CT angiography evaluates annulus size, root anatomy, coronary heights, and peripheral access โ€” critical for TAVR planning.
15. Which of the following is TRUE regarding bioprosthetic valve thrombosis risk after TAVR?
A. Thrombosis never occurs with TAVR valves
B”>B. Subclinical leaflet thrombosis can occur and may affect gradients
C. Warfarin is contraindicated postโ€‘TAVR
D. Leaflet thrombosis always causes stroke
Answer: B. Subclinical leaflet thrombosis (reduced leaflet motion) can be seen after TAVR and may increase gradients; anticoagulation decisions should be individualized.
16. A high STS score automatically means a patient should undergo TAVR rather than SAVR:
A. True โ€” STS is the sole determinant
B”>B. False โ€” decision requires heart team assessment and anatomy review
C. True โ€” EuroSCORE is irrelevant
D. False โ€” STS only predicts longโ€‘term survival
Answer: B. STS is important, but the heart team considers anatomy, frailty, life expectancy, and patient preference โ€” not STS alone.
17. Which statement about surgical risk calculators is correct?
A. STS and EuroSCORE II give identical risk estimates for every patient
B”>B. Different models may give different estimates; use them as part of clinical judgment
C. They replace clinical judgement entirely
D. They are only useful for nonโ€‘cardiac surgery
Answer: B. Risk models vary in variables and weighting; they inform but don’t replace individualized clinical decisions.
18. The presence of severe pulmonary hypertension in a patient with severe AS generally:
A. Lowers perioperative risk
B”>B. Increases perioperative risk and affects decision making
C. Is irrelevant to AVR decisions
D. Always contraindicates AVR
Answer: B. Severe pulmonary hypertension increases complexity and risk and is considered in heart team discussions for AVR strategy.
19. After calculating a high predicted surgical mortality, the appropriate next step is:
A. Ignore and proceed with surgery
B”>B. Discuss risks with a multidisciplinary heart team and patient preferences
C. Automatically deny intervention
D. Switch to conservative therapy without discussion
Answer: B. High risk prompts detailed heartโ€‘team discussion, shared decisionโ€‘making, and consideration of TAVR vs SAVR vs conservative management based on goals of care.
20. Which factor is LEAST likely to directly impact the numerical score in STS/EUROSCORE calculators?
A. Age
B”>B. Serum creatinine
C. Patient’s socioeconomic status
D. Urgency of surgery
Answer: C. Socioeconomic status is not typically a variable in these surgical risk models, though it can affect access and outcomes; models focus on clinical and procedural factors.
Educational MCQs โ€” not for assessment.

Aortic Stenosis Risk Scoring โ€“ Key Points

Category Key Features Clinical Relevance
STS Score (Society of Thoracic Surgeons) Predicts operative mortality & morbidity for SAVR Widely used in North America; key for TAVR vs SAVR decision
EuroSCORE II Predicts surgical mortality using weighted risk factors Common in Europe; complements STS score
High-Risk Features (Asymptomatic Severe AS) Peak velocity โ‰ฅ5.0 m/s, mean gradient โ‰ฅ60 mmHg, valve area <0.6 cmยฒ, EF <50% Indication for early intervention even if asymptomatic
Biomarkers BNP elevation, rapid rise on serial follow-up Suggests higher risk, guides timing of AVR
Exercise Testing Abnormal BP response, symptom provocation Reveals latent symptoms in โ€œasymptomaticโ€ patients
TAVR-specific Risk Models FRANCE-2, OBSERVANT, TVT registry risk models Predict short-term mortality after TAVR
Clinical Risk Factors Age, frailty, comorbidities (COPD, CKD, PAD, diabetes) Individualized assessment beyond numerical scores

โš ๏ธ Note: STS and EuroSCORE II are validated surgical risk calculators. Always use the official versions for clinical decision-making.

Aortic Stenosis Risk Score
Aortic Stenosis Risk Score
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