Locations:
Search IconSearch

Vital Stats in Adult Cardiac Surgery, Valve Surgery and Aorta Surgery

Our latest volume and outcomes data in infographic form

Below we share recent volumes and clinical outcomes from a sampling of centers in Cleveland Clinic’s Miller Family Heart, Vascular & Thoracic Institute.

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

ADULT CARDIAC SURGERY

Adult Cardiac Surgery Mortality Remains Low Even as Volume and Case Complexity Rise

bar graph showing volumes and mortality rates for heart operations

Over the past 16 years, mortality for adult cardiac surgery cases at Cleveland Clinic has substantially trended downward at the same time that case complexity has increased and volumes have steadily risen.

3-Star Performance

Cleveland Clinic received the highest Composite Quality Rating (three stars) for the following procedures in the most recent Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Adult Cardiac Surgery Database report (for the three-year period ending in June 2022):

badges showing 3-star quality ratings for cardiac operations
CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting; AVR = aortic valve replacement; MVRR = mitral valve repair/replacement

2022 In-Hospital Mortality (1/1/22-12/31/22)

tabular chart showing mortality rates for cardiac operations
CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting; AVR = aortic valve replacement; MV = mitral valve; STS = Society of Thoracic Surgeons

VALVE AND AORTA SURGERY

Aortic Valve Replacement (AVR)

0.0% operative mortality for isolated surgical AVR in 2022 (N = 405)

(vs. 1.3% STS predicted mortality)

0.5% operative mortality for surgical AVR + CABG in 2022 (N = 182)

(vs. 2.7% STS predicted mortality)

0.6% procedural mortality for transcatheter AVR in 2020 (N = 652)

(no predicted rate available)

Isolated Mitral Valve Repair

0.0% operative mortality among 3,905 cases from 2014 through 2022

Isolated Mitral Valve Replacement

0.6% operative mortality in 2022 (N = 179)

(vs. 3.8% STS predicted mortality)

Aorta Surgery*

2.1% operative mortality in 2022 (N = 1,100)

(no predicted rate available)

0.9% operative mortality for elective cases in 2022 (N = 862)

(no predicted rate available)

*Aorta surgery data are from the STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database and do not include vascular surgery cases.
STS = Society of Thoracic Surgeons; CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting


Cleveland Clinic’s Heart, Vascular & Thoracic Institute has a long-established tradition of reporting volume and outcomes data across its various subspecialty areas. For more information like the data reported above, visit clevelandclinic.org/hvtioutcomes and clevelandclinic.org/e15.

Advertisement

Related Articles

surgical team during a heart operation
AATS Quality Gateway: Comprehensive and Nuanced Cardiac Surgery Risk Modeling Is at Hand

Launch of the tool promises to reshape quality assessment across the specialty

extracted cardiac device lead covered with vegetations
Transvenous Lead Extraction: Differences and Similarities Between Pacemakers and ICDs

Lead dwell time and manufacturer emerge as independent predictors of success in registry study

coronary chronic total occlusion
Bringing More Options to Bear in CAD – Part 3: Refinements in Revascularization Care

The case for a thoughtful approach to CTO and minimally invasive options for CABG

Caregiver holding child's hand after surgery
Study: Machine Learning Predicts Cardiac Surgery-Associated Kidney Injury in Pediatric Patients

How the tool could help physicians alter management in real time

cardiac magnetic resonance image
Cardiac MR-Enriched Phenomapping Shows Potential to Improve Therapeutic Selection in ICM

Technique may lay groundwork for personalized decision-making in procedural intervention

illustration of heart and lungs with text
Vital Statistics in Adult Cardiac Surgery, Valve Surgery and Aorta Surgery

Check out our latest volume and outcomes data in these key areas

Koji Hashimoto, MD, and team
February 2, 2024/Digestive/Research
Combined Cardiac Surgery and Liver Transplant Is a New Option for Highly Selected Patients

New research indicates feasibility and helps identify which patients could benefit

Ad