American Heart Association Launches National Initiative to Combat Rising Heart Valve Disease Deaths
November 9th, 2025 9:00 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff
The American Heart Association's new Heart Valve Initiative aims to address the growing mortality from heart valve disease through improved diagnosis, treatment systems, and public education to save thousands of lives annually.
More than 28 million people worldwide are living with heart valve disease, with the condition contributing to more than 60,000 deaths each year in the United States alone. The American Heart Association is establishing heart valve disease as a critical focus area by launching a nationwide initiative to improve patient outcomes and health care quality through science and education. The Heart Valve Initiative will harmonize the Association's efforts in patient education, professional education, systems of care and quality improvement to make a greater impact for patients and clinical outcomes.
The new Heart Valve Initiative will expand efforts to help health systems and clinicians identify patients affected by heart valve disease earlier, treat them faster and deliver care aligned with the latest evidence-based guidelines. By integrating new hospital certification programs, health care professional education and patient engagement tools, the initiative is designed to drive improvement across the full continuum of care. Mariell Jessup, M.D., FAHA, chief science and medical officer of the American Heart Association, emphasized the importance of ensuring patients with valve disease have a system of care supporting their needs from diagnosis to treatment without unnecessary delays.
The Heart Valve Initiative is made possible from founding sponsor, Edwards Lifesciences, building on the current work around aortic stenosis (AS), one of the most common and serious heart valve diseases. The Target: Aortic Stenosis™ program uses a data registry to enhance the patient experience from symptom onset to appropriate diagnosis and follow-through, to timely treatment and disease management. One in 40 people in the U.S. have heart valve disease and the risk increases with age, especially if you are over 65 according to data from https://screenheartvalvedisease.com/.
Todd J. Brinton, chief scientific officer and corporate vice president of advanced innovation and technology at Edwards Lifesciences, noted that over six decades creating treatments for patients with structural heart disease has revealed that too many patients with valve disease go undiagnosed until it's too late. The initiative aims to equip healthcare professionals and patients with the tools to recognize symptoms earlier, engage in timely care and ultimately save lives. Over the next five years, the initiative will improve adherence to guideline-based care for heart valve diseases, expand data collection in the existing Target: Aortic Stenosis registry, build a guideline-based heart valve certification program for hospitals, advance public reporting and expand hospital recognition to drive high-quality care, provide multimedia education for both health care professionals and patients, and launch a national awareness campaign to educate people about heart valve disease.
Key clinical metrics for improvement will include timely diagnosis and management of severe and asymptomatic aortic stenosis, quality of echocardiographic assessment for heart valve diseases and appropriate referral to follow-up cardiac care. In addition to Edwards Lifesciences foundational support, the Heart Valve Initiative is supported in part by Kardigan. The initiative represents a comprehensive approach to addressing a condition that affects millions worldwide and contributes significantly to cardiovascular mortality rates.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by NewMediaWire. You can read the source press release here,
