1. Clinical feasibility study of transcatheter edge-to-edge mitral valve repair in dogs with the canine V-Clamp device
- Author
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Brianna M. Potter, E. Christopher Orton, Brian A. Scansen, Katie M. Abbott-Johnson, Lance C. Visser, I-Jung B. Chi, Evan S. Ross, Bruna Del Nero, Lalida Tantisuwat, Ellen T. Krause, Marlis L. Rezende, and Khursheed Mama
- Subjects
mitral regurgitation ,degenerative mitral valve disease ,myxomatous mitral valve disease ,transapical intervention ,transcatheter mitral valve repair ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
ObjectiveTo determine procedural feasibility, safety, and short-term efficacy in dogs with severe degenerative mitral regurgitation (MR) undergoing transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) with a canine-specific device.DesignProspective, single-arm (uncontrolled), single-institution clinical feasibility study.AnimalsFifty client-owned dogs with severe degenerative MR operated over a 28-month period.MethodsTEER was performed using the canine mitral V-Clamp via a transapical approach using transesophageal echocardiographic and fluoroscopic guidance. Indices of MR severity were determined by echocardiography the day before and 2 to 3 days after the procedure.ResultsProcedural feasibility was 96% based on delivery of at least one device in 48 of 50 dogs. There were no procedural deaths. Procedural safety was 96% based on survival to hospital discharge in 48 of 50 dogs. Euthanasia in 2 dogs prior to hospital discharge was due to damage of the mitral valve and worsened MR after the procedure. Device-related adverse event rate was 6.3% based on 3 events (single-leaflet device detachment, locking failure, locking failure with device embolization) in 59 implanted devices. All three events were nonfatal and successfully treated with a second device. Median regurgitant volume (mL/kg) decreased (p
- Published
- 2024
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