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Transcatheter Tricuspid Valve Intervention in Patients With Previous Left Valve Surgery

Authors :
Mirjam Winkel
Fabien Praz
Matthias Unterhuber
Sebastian Ludwig
Alberto Pozzoli
Hannes Alessandrini
Karl Patrik Kresoja
Giovanni Pedrazzini
Edwin Ho
Michel Zuber
Michael Mehr
Josep Rodés-Cabau
Jörg Hausleiter
Vanessa Moñivas
Guillem Muntané-Carol
Rebecca T. Hahn
Christian Frerker
Jean Michel Juliard
Daniel Braun
Gilbert H.L. Tang
François Philippon
Maurizio Taramasso
John G. Webb
Claudia Harr
Tamim Nazif
Ahmed A. Khattab
Martin B. Leon
Philipp Lurz
Adrian Attinger-Toller
Ulrich Schäfer
Neil Fam
Joachim Schofer
Julia Lurz
Horst Sievert
Ralph Stephan von Bardeleben
Martin Andreas
Ryan Kaple
Mara Gavazzoni
Mizuki Miura
Georg Nickening
Marcel Weber
Susheel Kodali
Daniel Kalbacher
Rodrigo Estevez-Loureiro
Edith Lubos
Azeem Latib
Eric Brochet
Luigi Biasco
Marco Russo
Rishi Puri
Alexander Lauten
Paolo Denti
Marina Urena
Dominique Himbert
Holger Thiele
Kim A. Connelly
Felix Kreidel
Francesco Maisano
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Scarce data exist on patients with previous left valve surgery (PLVS) undergoing transcatheter tricuspid valve intervention (TTVI). This study sought to investigate the procedural and early outcomes in patients with PLVS undergoing TTVI. METHODS This was a subanalysis of the multicenter TriValve registry including 462 patients, 82 (18%) with PLVS. Data were analyzed according to the presence of PLVS in the overall cohort and in a propensity score-matched population including 51 and 115 patients with and without PLVS, respectively. RESULTS Patients with PLVS were younger (72 �� 10 vs 78 �� 9 years; p < 0.01) and more frequently female (67.1% vs 53.2%; P��= 0.02). Similar rates of procedural success (PLVS 80.5%; no-PLVS 82.1%; P��= 0.73), and 30-day mortality (PLVS 2.4%, no-PLVS 3.4%; P��= 0.99) were observed. After matching, there were no significant differences in both all-cause rehospitalisation (PLVS 21.1%, no-PLVS 26.5%; P��= 0.60) and all-cause mortality (PLVS 9.8%, no-PLVS 6.7%; P��= 0.58). At last follow-up (median 6 [interquartile range 1-12] months after the procedure), most patients (81.8%) in the PLVS group were in NYHA functional class I-II (P��= 0.12 vs no-PLVS group), and TR grade was ��� 2 in 82.6% of patients (P��= 0.096 vs no-PVLS group). A poorer right ventricular function and previous heart failure hospitalization determined increased risks of procedural failure and poorer outcomes at follow-up, respectively. CONCLUSIONS In patients with PLVS, TTVI was associated with high rates of procedural success and low early mortality. However, about one-third of patients required rehospitalisation or died at midterm follow-up. These results would support TTVI as a reasonable alternative to redo surgery in patients with PLVS and suggest the importance of earlier treatment to improve clinical outcomes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....883fadc72e280247a02687f07e1a8626
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48350/163255