Overview
The overall hypothesis is that redo aortic valve replacement (rAVR) is superior to valve-invalve transcatheter aortic valve replacement (ViV-TAVR) for the composite endpoint of freedom from all-cause mortality, all-cause stroke, myocardial infarction, and rehospitalization for heart failure or aortic valve re-intervention at 5 years.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Indication for repeat intervention for failed surgical aortic bioprosthesis due to structural valve deterioration (SVD; prosthesis stenosis and/or transprosthetic insufficiency);
- Low to intermediate surgical risk (i.e., Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) predicted risk of mortality of \< 8%);
- Age \> 18 and \< 75 years;
- Both rAVR and ViV-TAVR are judged to be reasonable options based on evaluation by the local Heart Team
Exclusion Criteria:
- Multiple valvular disease requiring surgical intervention;
- High-risk coronary anatomy resulting in increased risk of coronary obstruction following ViV-TAVR prosthesis deployment;
- Complex coronary artery disease requiring revascularization (unprotected left main coronary artery, Syntax score \> 32) and Heart Team assessment that optimal revascularization cannot be performed;
- Failing valve with evidence of bacterial endocarditis or evidence of non-structural valve deterioration (e.g., paravalvular leak, thrombosis);
- Increased post-procedural gradients (mean \> 20 mmHg) or severe patient-prosthesis mismatch (PPM, indexed effective orifice area \< 0.65 cm2/m2) at discharge from index aortic valve replacement (AVR) procedure;
- Patients who choose to receive a mechanical AVR.


