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A cost-effectiveness study has not been done, but doctors hope the new device will prove cheaper by preventing the many complications and hospitalizations these patients endure now, said Duke's Dr. Joseph Rogers, a study co-leader.
There is a high death rate from the surgery or soon after it: 14 percent with the newer pump and 25 percent with the older one. Even so, most patients will still risk the surgery "because the alternative is worse," and far more perish without a device, said study co-leader Dr. Mark Slaughter, heart surgery chief at the University of Louisville.
It was an easy choice for Chuck Sixour, a retired school administrator in suburban Knoxville, Tenn.
"I'm 78. My heart's probably 90, but I feel 60, and the doctors tell me I look 60, mainly because I've been very active all my life," he said.
He received the new device in August 2007 as part of the study. And now? "You name it -- I do it," he said. "I golf two or three times a week. I go shopping with my wife."
Many older people are healthy other than having weak hearts, said Dr. Alfred Bove, a Temple University heart specialist and president of the American College of Cardiology.
"There are so many of these people that would enjoy life if we could get them out of heart failure," he said.
Not all are old, either. Leonor Ortiz Childers, a 46-year-old lawyer in Durham, N.C., developed heart failure when she had to be treated for breast cancer while pregnant with twins. The federal Food and Drug Administration allowed her to receive a HeartMate II for emergency use a year ago.
Now, with four children under 4, the device makes it possible "to live a fairly normal life," she said. "Every day I can hug my children. And as long as I have that, I'm a happy woman."
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On the Net:
Medical journal: http://www.nejm.org/
Heart meeting: http://www.americanheart.org/
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