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Protection Against Cerebral Embolism During Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement

Authors :
Samir R. Kapadia
Susheel Kodali
Raj Makkar
Roxana Mehran
Ronald M. Lazar
Robert Zivadinov
Michael G. Dwyer
Hasan Jilaihawi
Renu Virmani
Saif Anwaruddin
Vinod H. Thourani
Tamim Nazif
Norman Mangner
Felix Woitek
Amar Krishnaswamy
Stephanie Mick
Tarun Chakravarty
Mamoo Nakamura
James M. McCabe
Lowell Satler
Alan Zajarias
Wilson Y. Szeto
Lars Svensson
Maria C. Alu
Roseann M. White
Carlye Kraemer
Azin Parhizgar
Martin B. Leon
Axel Linke
Hasanian Al-Jilaihawi
Samir Kapadia
E. Murat Tuzcu
Tamin Nazif
Vinod Thourani
Vasilis Babaliaros
Chandan Devireddy
Kreton Mavromatis
Ron Waksman
Augusto Pichard
Wilson Szeto
Prashanth Vallabhajosyula
Jay Giri
Howard Herrmann
John Lasala
Adam Greenbaum
William O’Neill
Marvin Eng
Joshua Rovin
Lang Lin
Douglas Spriggs
Shing-Chiu Wong
Geoffrey Bergman
Arash Salemi
Richard Smalling
Biswajit Kar
Pranav Loyalka
D. Scott Lim
Michael Ragosta
Mark Reisman
James McCabe
Creighton Don
Samin Sharma
Annapoorna Kini
George Dangas
Paul Mahoney
Andrew Morse
Mark Stankewicz
Evelio Rodriguez
Christian Frerker
David Cohen
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 69:367-377
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Neurological complications after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) may be reduced with transcatheter cerebral embolic protection (TCEP).This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of TCEP during TAVR.Nineteen centers randomized 363 patients undergoing TAVR to a safety arm (n = 123), device imaging (n = 121), and control imaging (n = 119). The primary safety endpoint consisted of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) at 30 days, and the primary efficacy endpoint was reduction in new lesion volume in protected brain territories on magnetic resonance imaging scans at 2 to 7 days. Patients underwent neurocognitive assessments, and the debris captured was analyzed.The rate of MACCE (7.3%) was noninferior to the performance goal (18.3%, pTCEP was safe, captured embolic debris in 99% of patients, and did not change neurocognitive function. Reduction in new lesion volume on magnetic resonance scans was not statistically significant. (Cerebral Protection in Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement [SENTINEL]; NCT02214277).

Details

ISSN :
07351097
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd2a58910de6693254f0b4333c132b16