1. Silent cerebral infarction and cognitive function following TAVI: an observational two-centre UK comparison of the first-generation CoreValve and second-generation Lotus valve
- Author
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Fiona Richards, Mark Igra, Daniel J. Blackman, Anthony J P Goddard, Laura E Dobson, Christopher J Malkin, Peter P Swoboda, Catherine Loveday, Pankaj Garg, Graham J. Fent, Gerald P. McCann, John P Greenwood, Akhlaque Uddin, Anvesha Singh, Tarique A Musa, Sven Plein, and James R. J. Foley
- Subjects
Male ,neurocognitive function ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Cardiovascular Medicine ,Prosthesis ,Severity of Illness Index ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Risk Factors ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Psychomotor learning ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cerebral infarction ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,General Medicine ,Cerebral Infarction ,Mental Status and Dementia Tests ,medtronic corevalve ,Treatment Outcome ,Heart Valve Prosthesis ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.medical_specialty ,cerebral MRI ,Prosthesis Design ,Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,transcatheter aortic valve implantation ,Aged ,business.industry ,Research ,Aortic Valve Stenosis ,boston lotus ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cerebral mri ,Observational study ,business ,Neurocognitive - Abstract
ObjectiveTo compare the incidence of silent cerebral infarction and impact on cognitive function following transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) with the first-generation CoreValve (Medtronic, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) and second-generation Lotus valve (Boston Scientific, Natick Massachusetts, USA).DesignA prospective observational study comprising a 1.5 T cerebral MRI scan, performed preoperatively and immediately following TAVI, and neurocognitive assessments performed at baseline, 30 days and 1 year follow-up.SettingUniversity hospitals of Leeds and Leicester, UK.Patients66 (80.6±8.0 years, 47% male) patients with high-risk severe symptomatic aortic stenosis recruited between April 2012 and May 2015.Main outcome measuresIncidence of new cerebral microinfarction and objective decline in neurocognitive performance.ResultsAll underwent cerebral MRI at baseline and immediately following TAVI, and 49 (25 Lotus, 24 CoreValve) completed neurocognitive assessments at baseline, 30 days and 1 year. There was a significantly greater incidence of new cerebral microinfarction observed following the Lotus TAVI (23 (79%) vs 22 (59%), p=0.025) with a greater number of new infarcts per patient (median 3.5 (IQR 7.0) vs 2.0 (IQR 3.0), p=0.002). The mean volume of infarcted cerebral tissue per patient was equivalent following the two prostheses (p=0.166). More patients suffered new anterior (14 (48%) vs 2 (5%), p=0.001) and vertebrobasilar (15 (52%) vs 7 (19%), p=0.005) lesions following Lotus. Lotus was associated with a decline in verbal memory and psychomotor speed at 30 days. However, performance longitudinally at 1 year was preserved in all neurocognitive domains.ConclusionsThere was a higher incidence of silent cerebral microinfarction and a greater number of lesions per patient following Lotus compared with CoreValve. However, there was no objective decline in neurocognitive function discernible at 1 year following TAVI with either prosthesis.
- Published
- 2019