Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients

Abstract Background In the era of minimally invasive valve surgery (MIVS), automated titanium fasteners such as Cor Knot®, have reduced aortic-cross clamp (AXC) and cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) times to improve survival outcomes. Whilst, most comparative studies pertain to MIVS, there is a lack of l...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hiral Jhala, Keith Buchan, Hussein El-Shafei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-08-01
Series:Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-025-03419-5
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849389594671316992
author Hiral Jhala
Keith Buchan
Hussein El-Shafei
author_facet Hiral Jhala
Keith Buchan
Hussein El-Shafei
author_sort Hiral Jhala
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background In the era of minimally invasive valve surgery (MIVS), automated titanium fasteners such as Cor Knot®, have reduced aortic-cross clamp (AXC) and cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) times to improve survival outcomes. Whilst, most comparative studies pertain to MIVS, there is a lack of literature comparing Cor-Knot (CT) and manual knot tying (MT) in open valve procedures performed via full median sternotomy, particularly the long-term outcomes. We primarily compare AXC and CPB times, residual valvular regurgitation (RVR), freedom from valve re-intervention (FFI) and secondary post-operative outcomes of CT vs MT. Methods Retrospective analysis was performed for all adult patients, undergoing any first-time or redo valve surgery ± concomitant procedure via full median sternotomy, at a single-centre between January 2017 and January 2024). Patients were grouped according to operation type: isolated aortic valve replacement (AVR), isolated mitral valve replacement (MVR), isolated mitral valve repair (MVr), double valve, valve and concomitant CABG, major aortic surgery and redo valve surgery. Patients within each procedural group were further subdivided into either CT or MT groups. RVR and FFT between CT and MT in each subgroup were analysed using the Kaplan–Meier method. Results N = 1010 (CT: N = 492, MT: N = 518). Mean age was 67.7 years. AXC and CPB times were lower in the CT group (62.9 and 86.4 min) vs the MT group (74.9 and 100.1 min) in isolated aortic valve replacements (AVR)(p < 0.001). AXC and CPB times were also lower in the CT group (83.6 and 120.9 min) vs the MT group (103.7 and 143.3 min) in valve + CABG procedures (p < 0.001). The CT group had no RVR in isolated AVR or valve & CABG procedures, however a higher RVR in mitral valve surgery (p = 0.28), double valves (p = 0.49) and redo valves (p > 0.99) compared to the MT group. FFI at 7 years was 98.8% (MT) vs 94.1% (CT) (p = 0.02) in isolated AVR. Conclusion Cor-knot can safely and easily be used in all valve procedures. Intra-operative and cinical outcomes with CorKnot can be correlated better in AVR however the short and long-term benefits of CorKnot following mitral surgery are limited. Further larger studies, particularly in more complex procedural groups and long-term analyses are warranted to further validate our results.
format Article
id doaj-art-ae0d0855563f45b5b14db295e7aedf82
institution Kabale University
issn 1749-8090
language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
spelling doaj-art-ae0d0855563f45b5b14db295e7aedf822025-08-20T03:41:56ZengBMCJournal of Cardiothoracic Surgery1749-80902025-08-012011810.1186/s13019-025-03419-5Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patientsHiral Jhala0Keith Buchan1Hussein El-Shafei2Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Aberdeen Royal InfirmaryDepartment of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Aberdeen Royal InfirmaryDepartment of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Aberdeen Royal InfirmaryAbstract Background In the era of minimally invasive valve surgery (MIVS), automated titanium fasteners such as Cor Knot®, have reduced aortic-cross clamp (AXC) and cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) times to improve survival outcomes. Whilst, most comparative studies pertain to MIVS, there is a lack of literature comparing Cor-Knot (CT) and manual knot tying (MT) in open valve procedures performed via full median sternotomy, particularly the long-term outcomes. We primarily compare AXC and CPB times, residual valvular regurgitation (RVR), freedom from valve re-intervention (FFI) and secondary post-operative outcomes of CT vs MT. Methods Retrospective analysis was performed for all adult patients, undergoing any first-time or redo valve surgery ± concomitant procedure via full median sternotomy, at a single-centre between January 2017 and January 2024). Patients were grouped according to operation type: isolated aortic valve replacement (AVR), isolated mitral valve replacement (MVR), isolated mitral valve repair (MVr), double valve, valve and concomitant CABG, major aortic surgery and redo valve surgery. Patients within each procedural group were further subdivided into either CT or MT groups. RVR and FFT between CT and MT in each subgroup were analysed using the Kaplan–Meier method. Results N = 1010 (CT: N = 492, MT: N = 518). Mean age was 67.7 years. AXC and CPB times were lower in the CT group (62.9 and 86.4 min) vs the MT group (74.9 and 100.1 min) in isolated aortic valve replacements (AVR)(p < 0.001). AXC and CPB times were also lower in the CT group (83.6 and 120.9 min) vs the MT group (103.7 and 143.3 min) in valve + CABG procedures (p < 0.001). The CT group had no RVR in isolated AVR or valve & CABG procedures, however a higher RVR in mitral valve surgery (p = 0.28), double valves (p = 0.49) and redo valves (p > 0.99) compared to the MT group. FFI at 7 years was 98.8% (MT) vs 94.1% (CT) (p = 0.02) in isolated AVR. Conclusion Cor-knot can safely and easily be used in all valve procedures. Intra-operative and cinical outcomes with CorKnot can be correlated better in AVR however the short and long-term benefits of CorKnot following mitral surgery are limited. Further larger studies, particularly in more complex procedural groups and long-term analyses are warranted to further validate our results.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-025-03419-5CorKnotAutomated knot fastenerManual tieValve surgery
spellingShingle Hiral Jhala
Keith Buchan
Hussein El-Shafei
Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
CorKnot
Automated knot fastener
Manual tie
Valve surgery
title Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients
title_full Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients
title_fullStr Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients
title_short Comparison of outcomes post Cor-Knot versus Manual tying in valve surgery: our 8-year analysis of over 1000 patients
title_sort comparison of outcomes post cor knot versus manual tying in valve surgery our 8 year analysis of over 1000 patients
topic CorKnot
Automated knot fastener
Manual tie
Valve surgery
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-025-03419-5
work_keys_str_mv AT hiraljhala comparisonofoutcomespostcorknotversusmanualtyinginvalvesurgeryour8yearanalysisofover1000patients
AT keithbuchan comparisonofoutcomespostcorknotversusmanualtyinginvalvesurgeryour8yearanalysisofover1000patients
AT husseinelshafei comparisonofoutcomespostcorknotversusmanualtyinginvalvesurgeryour8yearanalysisofover1000patients