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HVAD to HeartMate 3 Left Ventricular Assist Device Exchange: Best Practices Recommendations

Authors :
Christopher T. Salerno
Christopher Hayward
Shelley Hall
Daniel Goldstein
Diyar Saeed
Jan Schmitto
David Kaczorowski
Ezequiel Molina
Daniel Zimpfer
Steven Tsui
Edward Soltesz
Duc Thin Pham
Nahush A. Mokadam
Arman Kilic
Erin Davis
Erika Feller
Angela Lorts
Scott Silvestry
Mark S. Slaughter
Evgenij Potapov
Pavan Atluri
Jennifer Cowger
Francis D. Pagani
Source :
The Annals of thoracic surgery. 113(6)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The HeartWare HVAD System (Medtronic) is a durable implantable left ventricular assist device that has been implanted in approximately 20,000 patients worldwide for bridge to transplant and destination therapy indications. In December 2020, Medtronic issued an Urgent Medical Device Communication informing clinicians of a critical device malfunction in which the HVAD may experience a delay or failure to restart after elective or accidental discontinuation of pump operation. Moreover, evolving retrospective comparative effectiveness studies of patients supported with the HVAD demonstrated a significantly higher risk of stroke and all-cause mortality when compared with a newer generation of a commercially available durable left ventricular assist device. Considering the totality of this new information on HVAD performance and the availability of an alternate commercially available device, Medtronic halted the sale and distribution of the HVAD System in June 2021. The decision to remove the HVAD from commercial distribution now requires the use of the HeartMate 3 left ventricular assist system (Abbott, Inc) if a patient previously implanted with an HVAD requires a pump exchange. The goal of this document is to review important differences in the design of the HVAD and HeartMate 3 that are relevant to the medical management of patients supported with these devices, and to assess the technical aspects of an HVAD-to-HeartMate 3 exchange. This document provides the best available evidence that supports best practices. (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2022;-:1-8).

Details

ISSN :
15526259
Volume :
113
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of thoracic surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1423c39734e081a6debb0ec94f8dd542