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Prospective Evaluation of Transseptal TMVR for Failed Surgical Bioprostheses

Authors :
Michael H. Salinger
Jorge Saucedo
Charanjit S. Rihal
Jeremy J. Thaden
Ron Waksman
Kenith Fang
William W. O'Neill
Hyde M. Russell
Akhil Narang
Saibal Kar
Lowell F. Satler
Igor F. Palacios
Mackram F. Eleid
Mayra Guerrero
Brad Lewis
Christopher Meduri
Marvin H. Eng
Ignacio Inglessis
Ted Feldman
Carl L. Tommaso
Paul J. Pearson
Tatiana Kaptzan
R Makkar
Philip Krause
Jae Oh
Dee Dee Wang
Vivek Rajagopal
Isaac George
Rebecca T. Hahn
Roberto M. Lang
Mark Reisman
Ashish Pershad
Martin B. Leon
Amit Pursnani
Ujala Bokhary
Susheel Kodali
Source :
JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions. 14:859-872
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Objectives The aim of this study was to assess 1-year clinical outcomes among high-risk patients with failed surgical mitral bioprostheses who underwent transseptal mitral valve-in-valve (MViV) with the SAPIEN 3 aortic transcatheter heart valve (THV) in the MITRAL (Mitral Implantation of Transcatheter Valves) trial. Background The MITRAL trial is the first prospective study evaluating transseptal MViV with the SAPIEN 3 aortic THV in high-risk patients with failed surgical mitral bioprostheses. Methods High-risk patients with symptomatic moderate to severe or severe mitral regurgitation (MR) or severe mitral stenosis due to failed surgical mitral bioprostheses were prospectively enrolled. The primary safety endpoint was technical success. The primary THV performance endpoint was absence of MR grade ≥2+ or mean mitral valve gradient ≥10 mm Hg (30 days and 1 year). Secondary endpoints included procedural success and all-cause mortality (30 days and 1 year). Results Thirty patients were enrolled between July 2016 and October 2017 (median age 77.5 years [interquartile range (IQR): 70.3 to 82.8 years], 63.3% women, median Society of Thoracic Surgeons score 9.4% [IQR: 5.8% to 12.0%], 80% in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV). The technical success rate was 100%. The primary performance endpoint in survivors was achieved in 96.6% (28 of 29) at 30 days and 82.8% (24 of 29) at 1 year. Thirty-day all-cause mortality was 3.3% and was unchanged at 1 year. The only death was due to airway obstruction after swallowing several pills simultaneously 29 days post-MViV. At 1-year follow-up, 89.3% of patients were in New York Heart Association functional class I or II, the median mean mitral valve gradient was 6.6 mm Hg (interquartile range: 5.5 to 8.9 mm Hg), and all patients had MR grade ≤1+. Conclusions Transseptal MViV in high-risk patients was associated with 100% technical success, low procedural complication rates, and very low mortality at 1 year. The vast majority of patients experienced significant symptom alleviation, and THV performance remained stable at 1 year.

Details

ISSN :
19368798
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b584e8b0f96bb5a6ef4db0506f0daafc