1. Management and Outcome of Failed Percutaneous Edge-to-Edge Mitral Valve Plasty: Insight From an International Registry.
- Author
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Mangieri A, Melillo F, Montalto C, Denti P, Praz F, Sala A, Winkel MG, Taramasso M, Tagliari AP, Fam NP, Rubbio AP, De Marco F, Bedogni F, Toggweiler S, Schofer J, Brinkmann C, Sievert H, Van Mieghem NM, Ooms JF, Paradis JM, Rodés-Cabau J, Brochet E, Himbert D, Perl L, Kornowski R, Ielasi A, Regazzoli D, Baldetti L, Masiero G, Tarantini G, Latib A, Laricchia A, Gattas A, Tchetchè D, Dumonteil N, Francesco G, Agricola E, Montorfano M, Lurz P, Crimi G, Maisano F, and Colombo A
- Subjects
- Cardiac Catheterization adverse effects, Humans, Mitral Valve diagnostic imaging, Mitral Valve surgery, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation, Mitral Valve Insufficiency diagnostic imaging, Mitral Valve Insufficiency surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: This study evaluated the incidence, management, and outcome of patients who experienced MitraClip (Abbott Vascular) failure secondary to loss of leaflet insertion (LLI), single leaflet detachment (SLD), or embolization., Background: Transcatheter edge-to-edge repair with MitraClip is an established therapy for the treatment of mitral regurgitation (MR), but no data exist regarding the prevalence and outcome according to the mode of clip failure., Methods: Between January 2009 and December 2020, we retrospectively screened 4,294 procedures of MitraClip performed in 19 centers. LLI was defined as damage to the leaflet where the MitraClip was attached, SLD as demonstration of complete separation between the device and a single leaflet tissue, and clip embolization as loss of contact between MitraClip and both leaflets., Results: A total of 147 cases of MitraClip failure were detected (overall incidence = 3.5%), and these were secondary to LLI or SLD in 47 (31.9%) and 99 (67.3%) cases, respectively, whereas in 1 (0.8%) case clip embolization was observed. MitraClip failure occurred in 67 (45.5%) patients with functional MR, in 64 (43.5%) patients with degenerative MR, and 16 (10.8%) with mixed etiology. Although the majority of MitraClip failures were detected before discharge (47 intraprocedural and 42 in the hospital), up to 39.5% of cases were diagnosed at follow-up. In total, 80 (54.4%) subjects underwent a redo procedure, either percutaneously with MitraClip (n = 51, 34.7%) or surgically (n = 36, 24.5%) including 4 cases of surgical conversion of the index procedure and 7 cases of bailout surgery after unsuccessful redo MitraClip. After a median follow-up of 163 days (IQR: 22-720 days), 50 (43.9%) subjects presented moderate to severe MR, and 43 (29.3%) patients died. An up-front redo MitraClip strategy was associated with a trend toward a reduced rate of death at follow-up vs surgical or conservative management (P = 0.067), whereas postprocedural acute kidney injury, age, and moderate to severe tricuspid regurgitation were independent predictors of death., Conclusions: MitraClip failure secondary to LLI and SLD is not a rare phenomenon and may occur during and also beyond hospitalization. Redo MitraClip strategy demonstrates a trend toward a reduced risk of death compared with bailout surgery and conservative management. A third of those patients remained with more than moderate MR and had substantial mortality at the intermediate-term follow-up., Competing Interests: Funding Support and Author Disclosures Dr Mangieri has received a research grant (to the institution) from Boston Scientific; and has served on a medical advisory board for Boston Scientific. Dr Tagliari has received a research grant from Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior-Brasil (finance code 001). Dr Denti received speaker honoraria from Abbott and Edwards Lifesciences; and is a consultant for Innovheart. Dr De Marco serves as a proctor for Boston Scientific and Kardia. Dr Montorfano serves as a proctor for Edwards Lifesciences, Abbott, and Kardia. Dr Toggweiler is a proctor and consultant for Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Biosensors/NVT; is a proctor for Abbott Vascular; and is a consultant for Medira, Shockwave, Teleflex, AtHeart, VeoSource, and Equity in Hi-D Imaging. Dr Sievert has received study honoraria, travel expenses, and consulting fees from 4tech Cardio, Abbott, Ablative Solutions, Ancora Heart, Bavaria Medizin Technologie GmbH, Bioventrix, Boston Scientific, Carag, Cardiac Dimensions, Celonova, Comed BV, Contego, CVRx, Edwards Lifesciences, Endologix, Hemoteq, Lifetech, Maquet Getinge Group, Medtronic, Mitralign, Nuomao Medtech, Occlutech, pfm Medical, Recor, Renal Guard, Rox Medical, Terumo, Vascular Dynamics, and Vivasure Medical. Dr Latib has served on advisory boards for Medtronic and Abbott; and has been a consultant to Edwards Lifesciences. Dr Fam serves as consultant for Edwards Lifesciences and Abbott. Dr Maisano received a grant and/or research institutional support from Abbott, Medtronic, Edwards Lifesciences, Biotronik, Boston Scientific Corporation, NVT, and Terumo; has received consulting fees and honoraria personal and an institutional grant from Abbott, Medtronic, Edwards Lifesciences, Xeltis, Cardiovalve, Occlufit, Simulands, Mtex; royalty income/IP rights from Edwards Lifesciences; and is a shareholder (including share options) of Cardiogard, Cardiovalve, Magenta, SwissVortex, Transseptalsolutions, 4Tech, and Perifect. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 American College of Cardiology Foundation. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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