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StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025 Jan-.

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Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025 Jan-.

ACC/AHA Guidelines for Valve Disease

; .

Author Information and Affiliations

Authors

1; 2.

Affiliations

1 Northwestern University
2 University of Illinois College of Medicine

Last Update: June 82024.

Summary / Explanation

The 2022 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guidelines on valvular heart disease were written by a joint committee considering recommendations from all previous guidelines. Below is a summary of the key recommendations from the guidelines.[1]

Introduction

The initial evaluation for all patients with valvular heart disease is based on history and physical examinationelectrocardiogramtransthoracic echocardiogram (TTE)and chest radiograph. Biomarkersfrailty scorestransesophageal echocardiogram (TEE)stress testingcardiac magnetic resonance imagingand cardiac catheterization can also improve diagnostic evaluation and risk stratification of VHD.

Valvular heart disease is classified based on the following stages:

  • Stage A – At risk
  • Stage B – Progressive
  • Stage C – Asymptomatic severe
  • Stage D – Symptomatic severe

Stage D valvular heart disease surgical management risk assessment should be performed using the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) scorefrailty indicesor the EUROSCORE II risk calculator.

Medical Therapy 

Primary antibiotic prophylaxis is recommended in patients with rheumatic fever to prevent valvular heart disease for over or equal to 10 years or until age 40 (whichever is longer). Antibiotic prophylaxis for infective endocarditis is recommended before dental procedures for patients with prosthetic valves and prosthetic valve repair (ringschordsor clips)prior infective endocarditisunrepaired congenital heart disease or repaired congenital heart disease with residual shuntsand cardiac transplant with valvular regurgitation.

The duration of antibiotic therapy for secondary prophylaxis of rheumatic fever depends on the presence or absence of valvular heart diseasecarditisand the risk of Group A streptococcus exposure.

Oral anticoagulation with non-vitamin K antagonists is recommended for patients with atrial fibrillation and valvular heart disease based on CHA2DS2VASc scoreexcept for patients with mechanical prosthetic valvesrheumatic mitral stenosis and bioprosthetic prosthetic valve implantation less than or equal to 3 months agowhere vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulation is recommended. In patients with asymptomatic aortic stenosis (AS)hypertension should be treated. Statin therapy is indicated for primary and secondary prevention of atherosclerosis in all patients with calcific AS.

Aortic Valve Disease

  • Stage D AS is classified as:
    • High gradient AS
    • Low flowlow gradient AS
    • Paradoxical low flow low gradient AS
  • In patients with suspected low-flowlow-gradient ASlow-dose dobutamine stress echocardiographyaortic valve calcium score using computed tomography (CT)and dimensionless index can be used to assess the severity. Before severity assessmentblood pressure control is required in patients with suspected paradoxical low-flowlow-gradient AS.
  • In asymptomatic severe ASexercise testing can be used to look for physiological changes and symptoms. Intervention is recommended with abnormal findings.
  • Aortic valve replacement (AVR) is recommended in stage D ASstage C AS with left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) less than 50%and stage B AS undergoing other cardiac surgery. AVR is also reasonable for patients with very severe ASdecreased exercise tolerance or hypotension during exercise testingserum B-type natriuretic peptide greater than 3 times normaland an increase in aortic velocity greater than or equal to 0.3 m/s per year.
  • In patients requiring AVRsurgical versus transcatheter AVR is decided based on patient agelife expectancyopen surgical riskand anatomical considerations. Surgical AVR (SAVR) is recommended for patients aged under 65 with a life expectancy greater than 20 years. For patients aged 65 to 80SAVR vs. transcatheter aortic valve intervention (TAVI) is recommended based on anatomyriskand shared decision-making. For patients aged over 80with a life expectancy of less than 10 years or high/prohibitive surgical riskTAVI is recommended if expected post-intervention survival is greater than 12 months with acceptable quality of life.
  • In patients undergoing surgical AVRthe choice for a mechanical or bioprosthetic prosthetic valve is based on their agethe potential need for and risks associated with valve reinterventionthe ability to take vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulantand patient preferences. In patients aged less than 50 with the appropriate anatomyaortic valve replacement with pulmonic autograft (Ross procedure) may be considered at a comprehensive valve center.
  • In chronic severe aortic regurgitation (AR)AVR is indicated in patients with stage D AR and stage C AR with LVEF less than or equal to 50%left ventricular end-systolic volume (LVESV) greater than 50 mm or indexed left ventricular end-systolic volume (LVESVi) greater than 25 mm/m2.
  • In patients with bicuspid aortic valveechocardiography should be used to evaluate AS and ARand CT angiography and/or MR angiography should be used to assess aortic pathology. Surgical management of a bicuspid aortic valve should be performed for asymptomatic or symptomatic patients in conjunction with aortic replacement when the aortic sinus or ascending aortic diameter is greater than 5.5 cm.

Mitral Valve Disease

  • Percutaneous mitral balloon commissurotomy (PMBC) is recommended in patients with stage D (valve area less than 1.5 cm2) rheumatic mitral stenosis (MS) who have favorable anatomyless than moderate mitral regurgitation (MR) and absence of left atrial thrombus. PMBC can also be considered in patients with stage C MS with pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) greater than 50 mm Hg. Surgical mitral valve intervention is recommended in severe rheumatic MS in those who are not candidates for PMBChave failed PMBCrequire other cardiac proceduresor do not have access to PMBC.
  • Exercise testing is recommended for patients with rheumatic MS after a discrepancy between symptoms and echocardiographic findings to observe changes in exercise tolerancePASPand transmitral gradient.
  • In patients with primary or secondary MRin addition to TTETEE can be used to evaluate MR severity and the mechanism of MR. In contrastcardiac magnetic resonance imaging can accurately evaluate left and right ventricular function and volumes. For asymptomatic patients with severe primary MRTTE is indicated every 6 to 12 months to monitor LV function and pulmonary artery pressure. In secondary MRcardiac catheterizationcoronary CT angiographyand cardiac magnetic resonance imaging can be used to assess ventricular function and viability. TEE is used mainly for preprocedural planning for transcatheter-edge-to-edge repair (TEER) and intraprocedural imaging.
  • Mitral valve intervention is indicated in patients with stage D MR or asymptomatic/stage C MR with LVEF less than or equal to 60% or LVESD greater than 40 mm. In patients requiring mitral valve surgery for primary MRmitral valve repair is preferred over mitral valve replacement if the anatomic cause is a degenerative disease and a successfuldurable repair is possible. In primary MR requiring mitral valve intervention who have high surgical riskTEER can be considered.
  • In patients with stage D secondary primary MRas well as select patients with secondary MR remaining severely symptomatic despite optimal medical therapy for heart failureTEER can be considered for LVEF 20% to 50%LVESV less than or equal to 70 mmand PASP less than 70 mm Hg and are at high or prohibitive risk for surgery. TEE is indicated to determine the procedure's suitability. Mitral valve surgery can be considered in stage D secondary MR when LVEF is greater than or equal to 50% for those with severe persistent symptoms as well as those with chronic severe secondary MR related to LV systolic dysfunction (LVEF less than 50%) while on optimal guideline-directed medical therapy for heart failure.

Tricuspid Valve Disease

Secondary tricuspid regurgitation (TR) should be managed medically to treat the etiology (egheart failureatrial fibrillationpulmonary hypertension). Tricuspid valve surgery is indicated for patients with stage C and D TR who are undergoing left-sided valve surgery and may be beneficial for stage B TR with annular dilation (tricuspid end-diastolic diameter greater than 40 mm or greater than 21 mm/mindexed to body surface area). Isolated tricuspid valve surgery is also reasonable in patients who have stage D primary TR with evidence of right-sided heart failure refractory to medical therapy if completed before the onset of severe RV dysfunction or end-organ liver and kidney damage.

Prosthetic Valves

When suspicion of prosthetic valve dysfunction with a TTE does not show evidence of the same3-dimensional TEEgated cardiac CTor fluoroscopy is indicated to assess prosthetic valve dysfunctionas TTE may be limited by acoustic shadowing from the prosthesis. Surveillance TTE imaging for a surgical bioprosthesis is once every 5 to 10 years and then annually after implantationeven without a clinical change. Annual TTE for a transcatheter aortic bioprosthesis is reasonable.

The decision to use a mechanical versus a bioprosthetic surgical valve should involve shared decision-making and consider the patient's agelife expectancyrisk of long-term oral anticoagulationrisk of reinterventionanatomical considerationsaccess to medical careand patient preference. For patients with mechanical valves undergoing minor procedures (egdental extractioncataract surgery)vitamin K antagonist anticoagulation should be continued. For patients with bileaflet mechanical valves and no other thromboembolism risk factor undergoing invasive procedurestemporary interruption of the anticoagulation without bridging therapy is recommended. For patients with bioprosthetic heart valves and atrial fibrillation with a high CHA2DS2VASc scorepatients with a mechanical mitral valveand patients with a mechanical aortic valve with significant risk for thromboembolismbridging therapy should be consideredwhen the INR is subtherapeutic. Increasing the INR goal or adding low-dose aspirin is reasonable in patients with a mechanical heart valve and a systemic embolic event on therapeutic INR.

For patients who have thrombosis of left-sided mechanical valvesurgent management with fibrinolytic therapy or emergent surgery is recommended. Anticoagulation with vitamin K is recommended for patients with thrombosis of bioprosthetic valves.

For patients with symptomatic prosthetic valve stenosisrepeat surgical or transcatheter intervention is indicated depending on surgical risk. For patients with paravalvular regurgitation or severe valvular regurgitation causing intractable hemolysis or NYHA Class III or IV heart failure symptomssurgical reintervention is recommended. For those with a high surgical risk and favorable anatomytranscatheter paravalvular leak repair or a valve-in-valve procedure is reasonable.

Infective Endocarditis

The Modified Duke criteria should be used to diagnose suspected infective endocarditis (IE). TTE is the first-line imaging test for IEand TEE is indicated for patients with nondiagnostic TTE with prosthetic valves or intracardiac device leads when suspicion of complications from IE or for staphylococcalenterococcalor fungal bacteremia are apparent. CT imaging is reasonable in patients without clearly delineated anatomy with echocardiography in the setting of suspected paravalvular infection. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT can be used as an adjunct for diagnosing IE. Intravenous antibiotics are first-line therapy for all patients with IE.

Early surgical intervention (during initial hospitalization and before completion of the therapeutic course of antibiotics) is recommended in patients with valve dysfunction causing heart failurecomplicated IE (ieheart blockannular or periaortic abscessdestructive penetrating lesions)patients with persistent bacteremia (greater than 5 days after initiation of appropriate antimicrobial therapy)in patients with IE due to S aureusfungal infectionor highly resistant organisms. Surgical intervention is also reasonable in patients with relapsing prosthetic valve endocarditis or recurrent emboli and persistent vegetation despite antibiotic therapy. The pacemaker or defibrillator should be removed for patients with IE and implanted cardiac electronic devicesincluding all the leads and the generator.

Patients with native left-sided valve mobile vegetations greater than 10 mm in early surgery may be considered. In patients with an indication for surgery who have suffered a stroke but have no evidence of intracranial hemorrhage or extensive neurological damageoperation without delay is recommended. For those with extensive neurologic damagemajor ischemic strokeor bleedingdelaying surgery at least 4 weeks may be considered in hemodynamically stable patients.

Pregnancy and Valvular Heart Disease 

All pregnant women with stage C and D valvular heart disease should undergo pre-pregnancy counseling and should be monitored at a tertiary care center with a heart valve team. Exercise testing is reasonable for stage C valvular heart disease pre-conception. Women with stage D valvular heart disease should undergo valve intervention before pregnancy. The choice of prosthetic valves should be based on a shared decision-making process that accounts for the patient's values and preferencesincluding discussing the risks of a mechanical valve during pregnancy and the reduced durability of bioprosthetic valves in young women. Women with stage C MS should undergo PMBC before pregnancy. Women with stage C high gradient AS should undergo valve intervention before pregnancy.

In pregnant women with stage D ASvalve intervention is reasonable when hemodynamic deterioration or heart failure symptoms are present. In pregnant women with stage D MSPMBC is reasonable when symptoms persist after medical therapy. In pregnant women with stage D MR refractory to medical therapyvalve intervention is reasonable during pregnancy. For pregnant women with mechanical valves who require a warfarin dose of less than or equal to 5 mg/daywarfarin can be continued for all 3 trimesters after a discussion of risks and benefits with the patient.

For pregnant women with mechanical valves who require a warfarin dose of greater than 5 mg/daydose-adjusted low molecular weight heparin is recommended during the first trimesterfollowed by the resumption of warfarin during the second and third trimesters. Pregnant women with mechanical heart valves who are on warfarin should be switched to twice-daily low molecular weight heparin at least 1 week before planned delivery and switched to intravenous unfractionated heparin at least 36 hours before scheduled deliverywhich should be stopped at least 6 hours before delivery. For pregnant women with thrombosis of a mechanical valveslow infusion low-dose fibrinolytic therapy is reasonable.

Concomitant Cardiac Conditions

For patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve interventiona coronary evaluation using invasive angiography or coronary CT angiography (for patients with low pretest probability) is recommended to guide potential revascularization of left main or proximal coronary artery disease (CAD). In patients planned for valve interventionwith anginal symptomsevidence of ischemialeft ventricular systolic dysfunctionhistory of CADor risk factors for CADcoronary evaluation is recommended before valve interventionand revascularization is reasonable for those with left main or proximal CAD. In patients with atrial fibrillation and severe valvular heart disease planned for valvular surgerysurgical pulmonary vein isolation or a maze procedureas well as surgical left atrial appendage ligation or excisionshould be considered.

The guidelines promote a multidisciplinary heart team evaluation for patients with severe valvular heart disease comprising clinical cardiologists with expertiseadvanced cardiac imaging specialistsinterventional cardiologistsadvanced heart failure specialistsand cardiac valve surgeons.

Review Questions

References

1.
Writing Committee Members. Otto CMNishimura RABonow ROCarabello BAErwin JPGentile FJneid HKrieger EVMack MMcLeod CO'Gara PTRigolin VHSundt TMThompson AToly CACC/AHA Joint Committee Members. O'Gara PTBeckman JALevine GNAl-Khatib SMArmbruster ABirtcher KKCiggaroa JDeswal ADixon DLFleisher LAde las Fuentes LGentile FGoldberger ZDGorenek BHaynes NHernandez AFHlatky MAJoglar JAJones WSMarine JEMark DPalaniappan LPiano MRSpatz ESTamis-Holland JWijeysundera DNWoo YJ. 2020 ACC/AHA guideline for the management of patients with valvular heart disease: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2021 Aug;162(2):e183-e353. [PubMed: 33972115]

Disclosure: Kifah Hussain declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Mary Huerter declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Copyright © 2025StatPearls Publishing LLC.

This book is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ )which permits others to distribute the workprovided that the article is not altered or used commercially. You are not required to obtain permission to distribute this articleprovided that you credit the author and journal.

Bookshelf ID: NBK606116PMID: 39163449

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    Hussain KHuerter M. ACC/AHA Guidelines for Valve Disease. [Updated 2024 Jun 8]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025 Jan-.

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