HomeMedical SpecialtiesCardiologyReducing waitlists for patients with heart valve disease

Reducing waitlists for patients with heart valve disease

Published on

The Montreal Heart Institute recently opened the MHI’s Heart Valve Centre, a large-scale medical and scientific endeavour that aims to become a national hub of expertise. The new Centre will enable the MHI to double the number of patients with valve disease it can treat by 2028. The goal is to become a Canadian leader of heart valve disease and rank one of the world’s top ten most advanced centres in this quickly evolving field.

“This new centre for highly specialized care represents a major advance in how valve disease is treated. It also perfectly embodies our vision to make medical excellence accessible to patients both here and abroad. It’s a cutting-edge centre that will allow us to save more lives,” said Dr. Peter Guerra, Head of Specialized Medicine at the MHI.

Heart valve disease affects 1 in 40 Canadians and is a significant cause of heart failure, morbidity, and mortality. Unfortunately, heart valve disease will become more prevalent as the population continues to age. It is estimated that by 2040, 1.5 million Canadians aged 65 and over will be living with heart valve disease.

Over the past few years, percutaneous valve therapies have transformed the way these pathologies are treated. These procedures do not require open-heart surgery or general anaesthesia. Patients recover more quickly, experience less pain, need less medication, and require shorter hospital stays. These safe approaches are making treatments accessible to more patients while lessening the burden on the health care system.

“Sixty five per cent of patients who are hospitalized at the MHI are discharged the day after this new procedure. And most can resume their daily activities a week later,” said Dr. Walid Ben Ali, a heart surgeon at the MHI.

The MHI recently recruited Dr. Ralph Stephan von Bardeleben a physician renowned for his in-depth expertise in the clinical, research, and educational aspects of minimally invasive valve therapies. Dr. von Bardeleben has performed a record number of percutaneous mitral and tricuspid procedures. The MHI hired Dr. von Bardeleben as part of a strategy to reaffirm its expertise in valve therapies and become a world-class centre.

In only one week, the MHI’s teams carried out mitral and tricuspid procedures in 23 patients in a single operating room. A record in North America. The MHI also aims to each year carry out 1,000 percutaneous aortic valve replacements (+100%) and 400 percutaneous mitral and tricuspid procedures (+300%), for a total of 1,400 valve procedures – a figure that would place it alongside the most advanced health institutions in Europe. 

Latest articles

The Cost of Silence: Why Black Youth Mental Health Can’t Wait

When we talk about mental health in Canada, the general numbers often hide a...

Iron deficiency anemia – demystifying a common, treatable and preventable public health problem

Over 830,000 Canadians have iron deficiency anemia (IDA),1 the most common cause of anemia.2...

Women living with Parkinson’s are overlooked and under-researched

Nearly half of Parkinson’s diagnoses are women, yet their care, support and research is...

Antibiotic resistance in Canada: What you can do

It’s normal to want quick relief when you’re sick fighting an infection. Antibiotics seem...

More like this

The Cost of Silence: Why Black Youth Mental Health Can’t Wait

When we talk about mental health in Canada, the general numbers often hide a...

Iron deficiency anemia – demystifying a common, treatable and preventable public health problem

Over 830,000 Canadians have iron deficiency anemia (IDA),1 the most common cause of anemia.2...

Women living with Parkinson’s are overlooked and under-researched

Nearly half of Parkinson’s diagnoses are women, yet their care, support and research is...

Admissions for child maltreatment decreased during first phase of COVID-19 pandemic, but ICU admissions increased later

Hospital admissions for maltreatment of children under the age of 2 years declined 31%...

We keep fighting addiction at the worst possible moment in a person’s life

Governments and health systems organize care around crises, yet recovery is decided by everyday...

A new home for Canada’s largest Cancer Research Tumour Bank

Decades of cancer research — and thousands of patient tumour samples — now have...