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1-Year Outcomes of Transcatheter Tricuspid Valve Repair

Kodali, Susheel K; Hahn, Rebecca T; Davidson, Charles J; Narang, Akhil; Greenbaum, Adam; Gleason, Patrick; Kapadia, Samir; Miyasaka, Rhonda; Zahr, Firas; Chadderdon, Scott; Smith, Robert L; Grayburn, Paul; Kipperman, Robert M; Marcoff, Leo; Whisenant, Brian; Gonzales, Mike; Makkar, Raj; Makar, Moody; O'Neill, William; Wang, Dee Dee; Gray, William A; Abramson, Sandra; Hermiller, James; Mitchel, Lucas; Lim, D Scott; Fowler, Dale; Williams, Mathew; Pislaru, Sorin V; Dahou, Abdellaziz; Mack, Michael J; Leon, Martin B; Eleid, Mackram F
BACKGROUND:Surgical management of isolated tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is associated with high morbidity and mortality, thereby creating a significant need for a lower-risk transcatheter solution. OBJECTIVES:The single-arm, multicenter, prospective CLASP TR (Edwards PASCAL TrAnScatheter Valve RePair System in Tricuspid Regurgitation [CLASP TR] Early Feasibility Study) evaluated 1-year outcomes of the PASCAL transcatheter valve repair system (Edwards Lifesciences) to treat TR. METHODS:Study inclusion required a previous diagnosis of severe or greater TR and persistent symptoms despite medical treatment. An independent core laboratory evaluated echocardiographic results, and a clinical events committee adjudicated major adverse events. The study evaluated primary safety and performance outcomes, with echocardiographic, clinical, and functional endpoints. Study investigators report 1-year all-cause mortality and heart failure hospitalization rates. RESULTS:Sixty-five patients were enrolled: mean age of 77.4 years; 55.4% female; and 97.0% with severe to torrential TR. At 30 days, cardiovascular mortality was 3.1%, the stroke rate was 1.5%, and no device-related reinterventions were reported. Between 30 days and 1 year, there were an additional 3 cardiovascular deaths (4.8%), 2 strokes (3.2%), and 1 unplanned or emergency reintervention (1.6%). One-year postprocedure, TR severity significantly reduced (P < 0.001), with 31 of 36 (86.0%) patients achieving moderate or less TR; 100% had at least 1 TR grade reduction. Freedom from all-cause mortality and heart failure hospitalization by Kaplan-Meier analyses were 87.9% and 78.5%, respectively. Their New York Heart Association functional class significantly improved (P < 0.001) with 92% in class I or II, 6-minute walk distance increased by 94 m (P = 0.014), and overall Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire scores improved by 18 points (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS:The PASCAL system demonstrated low complication and high survival rates, with significant and sustained improvements in TR, functional status, and quality of life at 1 year. (Edwards PASCAL TrAnScatheter Valve RePair System in Tricuspid Regurgitation [CLASP TR] Early Feasibility Study [CLASP TR EFS]; NCT03745313).
PMID: 37137586
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 5509092

Low-Dose vs Standard Warfarin After Mechanical Mitral Valve Replacement: A Randomized Trial

Chu, Michael W A; Ruel, Marc; Graeve, Allen; Gerdisch, Marc W; Damiano, Ralph J; Smith, Robert L; Keeling, William Brent; Wait, Michael A; Hagberg, Robert C; Quinn, Reed D; Sethi, Gulshan K; Floridia, Rosario; Barreiro, Christopher J; Pruitt, Andrew L; Accola, Kevin D; Dagenais, Francois; Markowitz, Alan H; Ye, Jian; Sekela, Michael E; Tsuda, Ryan Y; Duncan, David A; Swistel, Daniel G; Harville, Lacy E; DeRose, Joseph J; Lehr, Eric J; Alexander, John H; Puskas, John D
BACKGROUND:Current guidelines recommend a target international normalized ratio (INR) range of 2.5 to 3.5 in patients with a mechanical mitral prosthesis. The Prospective Randomized On-X Anticoagulation Clinical Trial (PROACT) Mitral randomized controlled noninferiority trial assessed safety and efficacy of warfarin at doses lower than currently recommended in patients with an On-X (Artivion, Inc) mechanical mitral valve. METHODS:After On-X mechanical mitral valve replacement, followed by at least 3 months of standard anticoagulation, 401 patients at 44 North American centers were randomized to low-dose warfarin (target INR, 2.0-2.5) or standard-dose warfarin (target INR, 2.5-3.5). All patients were prescribed aspirin, 81 mg daily, and encouraged to use home INR testing. The primary end point was the sum of the linearized rates of thromboembolism, valve thrombosis, and bleeding events. The design was based on an expected 7.3% event rate and 1.5% noninferiority margin. RESULTS:Mean patient follow-up was 4.1 years. Mean INR was 2.47 and 2.92 (P <.001) in the low-dose and standard-dose warfarin groups, respectively. Primary end point rates were 11.9% per patient-year in the low-dose group and 12.0% per patient-year in the standard-dose group (difference, -0.07%; 95% CI, -3.40% to 3.26%). The CI >1.5%, thus noninferiority was not achieved. Rates (percentage per patient-year) of the individual components of the primary end point were 2.3% vs 2.5% for thromboembolism, 0.5% vs 0.5% for valve thrombosis, and 9.13% vs 9.04% for bleeding. CONCLUSIONS:Compared with standard-dose warfarin, low-dose warfarin did not achieve noninferiority for the composite primary end point. (PROACT Clinicaltrials.gov number, NCT00291525).
PMID: 36610532
ISSN: 1552-6259
CID: 5426292

Transcatheter Edge-to-Edge Repair in Patients With Anatomically Complex Degenerative Mitral Regurgitation

Hausleiter, Jörg; Lim, D Scott; Gillam, Linda D; Zahr, Firas; Chadderdon, Scott; Rassi, Andrew N; Makkar, Raj; Goldman, Scott; Rudolph, Volker; Hermiller, James; Kipperman, Robert M; Dhoble, Abhijeet; Smalling, Richard; Latib, Azeem; Kodali, Susheel K; Lazkani, Mohamad; Choo, Joseph; Lurz, Philipp; O'Neill, William W; Laham, Roger; Rodés-Cabau, Josep; Kar, Saibal; Schofer, Niklas; Whisenant, Brian; Inglessis-Azuaje, Ignacio; Baldus, Stephan; Kapadia, Samir; Koulogiannis, Konstantinos; Marcoff, Leo; Smith, Robert L
BACKGROUND:Mitral valve transcatheter edge-to-edge repair is safe and effective in treating degenerative mitral regurgitation (DMR) patients at prohibitive surgical risk, but outcomes in complex mitral valve anatomy patients vary. OBJECTIVES:The PASCAL IID registry assessed safety, echocardiographic, and clinical outcomes with the PASCAL system in prohibitive risk patients with significant symptomatic DMR and complex mitral valve anatomy. METHODS:Patients in the prospective, multicenter, single-arm registry had 3+ or 4+ DMR, were at prohibitive surgical risk, presented with complex anatomic features based on the MitraClip instructions for use, and were deemed suitable for the PASCAL system by a central screening committee. Enrolled patients were treated with the PASCAL system. Safety, effectiveness, and functional and quality-of-life outcomes were assessed. Study oversight also included an echocardiographic core laboratory and clinical events committee. RESULTS:, and 10.6% large flail gap and/or large flail width). The implant success rate was 92.9%. The 30-day composite major adverse event rate was 11.2%. At 6 months, 92.4% patients achieved MR ≤2+ and 56.1% achieved MR ≤1+ (P < 0.001 vs baseline). The Kaplan-Meier estimates for survival, freedom from major adverse events, and heart failure hospitalization at 6 months were 93.7%, 85.6%, and 92.6%, respectively. Patients experienced significant symptomatic improvement compared with baseline (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS:The outcomes of the PASCAL IID registry establish the PASCAL system as a useful therapy for prohibitive surgical risk DMR patients with complex mitral valve anatomy. (PASCAL IID Registry within the Edwards PASCAL TrAnScatheter Valve RePair System Pivotal Clinical Trial [CLASP IID] NCT03706833).
PMID: 36725171
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 5494382

Bioprosthetic Aortic Valve Hemodynamics: Definitions, Outcomes, and Evidence Gaps: JACC State-of-the-Art Review

Herrmann, Howard C; Pibarot, Philippe; Wu, Changfu; Hahn, Rebecca T; Tang, Gilbert H L; Abbas, Amr E; Playford, David; Ruel, Marc; Jilaihawi, Hasan; Sathananthan, Janarthanan; Wood, David A; De Paulis, Ruggero; Bax, Jeroen J; Rodes-Cabau, Josep; Cameron, Duke E; Chen, Tiffany; Del Nido, Pedro J; Dweck, Marc R; Kaneko, Tsuyoshi; Latib, Azeem; Moat, Neil; Modine, Thomas; Popma, Jeffrey J; Raben, Jamie; Smith, Robert L; Tchetche, Didier; Thomas, Martyn R; Vincent, Flavien; Yoganathan, Ajit; Zuckerman, Bram; Mack, Michael J; Leon, Martin B
A virtual workshop was organized by the Heart Valve Collaboratory to identify areas of expert consensus, areas of disagreement, and evidence gaps related to bioprosthetic aortic valve hemodynamics. Impaired functional performance of bioprosthetic aortic valve replacement is associated with adverse patient outcomes; however, this assessment is complicated by the lack of standardization for labelling, definitions, and measurement techniques, both after surgical and transcatheter valve replacement. Echocardiography remains the standard assessment methodology because of its ease of performance, widespread availability, ability to do serial measurements over time, and correlation with outcomes. Management of a high gradient after replacement requires integration of the patient's clinical status, physical examination, and multimodality imaging in addition to shared patient decisions regarding treatment options. Future priorities that are underway include efforts to standardize prosthesis sizing and labelling for both surgical and transcatheter valves as well as trials to characterize the consequences of adverse hemodynamics.
PMID: 35902177
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 5276882

Low-Dose Versus Standard Warfarin After Mechanical Mitral Valve Replacement: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Chu, Michael W A; Ruel, Marc; Graeve, Allen; Gerdisch, Marc W; Damiano, Ralph J; Smith, Robert L; Keeling, William Brent; Wait, Michael A; Hagberg, Robert C; Quinn, Reed D; Sethi, Gulshan K; Floridia, Rosario; Barreiro, Christopher J; Pruitt, Andrew L; Accola, Kevin D; Dagenais, Francois; Markowitz, Alan H; Ye, Jian; Sekela, Michael E; Tsuda, Ryan Y; Duncan, David A; Swistel, Daniel G; Harville, Lacy E; DeRose, Joseph J; Lehr, Eric J; Puskas, John D
BACKGROUND:Current guidelines recommend a target international normalized ratio (INR) range of 2.5 to 3.5 in patients with a mechanical mitral prosthesis. The Prospective Randomized On-X Anticoagulation Clinical Trial (PROACT) Mitral randomized controlled trial assessed the safety and efficacy of warfarin at doses lower than currently recommended, in patients with an On-X mechanical mitral valve. METHODS:After On-X mechanical mitral valve replacement followed by at least 3 months of standard anticoagulation, 401 patients at 44 North American centers were randomized to low-dose warfarin (target INR 2.0 to 2.5) or standard-dose warfarin (target INR 2.5 to 3.5). All patients were prescribed aspirin 81 mg daily and encouraged to use home INR testing. The primary endpoint was the sum of the linearized rates of thromboembolism, valve thrombosis, and bleeding events. Secondary endpoints included death, valve-related events, New York Heart Association classification, and valve hemodynamics. RESULTS:Mean patient follow-up was 4.1 years. Mean INR was 2.47 and 2.92 (P <.001) in the low-dose and standard-dose warfarin groups, respectively. Primary endpoint rates were 11.9%/patient-year in the low-dose group and 12.0%/patient-year in the standard-dose group (P = .97). The -0.07% difference (95% confidence interval: -0.07, -0.06) was noninferior (<1.5% margin). Individual rates (expressed as %/patient-year) of thromboembolism (2.3% vs 2.5%), valve thrombosis (0.5% vs 0.5%), and major bleeding (4.9% vs 4.3%) were also similar and noninferior. CONCLUSIONS:Low-dose warfarin was noninferior to standard-dose warfarin in patients with an On-X mechanical mitral prosthesis, following >3 postoperative months of standard anticoagulation therapy. (PROACT Clinicaltrials.gov number, NCT00291525).
PMID: 35101419
ISSN: 1552-6259
CID: 5153402

Derived Neutrophil-to-Lymphocyte Ratio as a Potential Biomarker for Lung Cancer Survival [Meeting Abstract]

Imperato, A E; Li, Y; Smith, R L; Sauthoff, H; Felner, K; Segal, L N; Sterman, D H; Tsay, J J
RATIONALE: Derived neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (dNLR) of peripheral blood, a marker of host inflammation and cytokine activation, may be a surrogate for more aggressive disease. It is a biomarker that has been associated with survival and response to immunotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), although an optimal threshold value has not been established. We had previously found in a NSCLC cohort that a dNLR cutoff of 2 was an optimal cutoff to predict survival at 6 months in patients with NSCLC; median survival was significantly shorter in patients with a >=2 dNLR (7.0 months) versus those with a <2 dNLR (64.5 months; p = 0.004). Here we present an interim analysis aiming to validate the use of this biomarker in a second cohort.
METHOD(S): A veteran cohort (n=42) from the VA New York Harbor Healthcare System, who underwent diagnostic bronchoscopy and found to have NSCLC, was used as a validation cohort. Peripheral blood was obtained pre-treatment and at or near the time of diagnosis. The dNLR was calculated as ANC/(W
EMBASE:635310166
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 4915442

First in human experience with an epicardial beating heart device for secondary mitral regurgitation

Thourani, Vinod H; George, Isaac; Rucinskas, Kestutis; Kalinauskas, Gintaras; Janusauskas, Vilius; Zakarkaite, Diana; Ailawadi, Gorav; Smith, Robert; Mack, Michael J
OBJECTIVE:We describe a novel, off-pump, epicardial implant that is intended to reshape both the mitral valve annulus and the left ventricle (LV) in those with secondary mitral regurgitation (MR). METHODS:Five patients underwent an epicardial implant with the Mitral Touch device (Mitre Medical Corp, Morgan Hill, Calif), during concomitant off-pump coronary artery bypass for secondary MR. The median age was 71.2 years; 4 patients had severe MR and 1 moderate. Patients were followed for 1 year with transthoracic echocardiography and computed tomography. Safety, cardiac remodeling, and MR were assessed by an independent core laboratory. RESULTS:One patient died within 30 days from nondevice-related organ failure and the remaining 4 survived through 1-year follow-up. Implant technical success was 100% and took an average of 52 minutes. Paired computed tomography showed mean left ventricular end-systolic volume remodeling at 1 and 12 months of -35% and -31%, respectively. They averaged left atrial end-systolic volume remodeling of -12% and -15% at 1 and 12 months. Right ventricular end-systolic volume changes of -19% and -8% and right atrial end-systolic volume remodeling of -5% and 1%, at the 1- and 12-month time points were noted. Regurgitant volume by transthoracic echocardiography decreased by 46% and 44% and the ejection fraction from 34.6% to 32.1% and 39.5%, at 1 and 12 months, respectively. There were no device-related complications reported to 1 year. CONCLUSIONS:The Epicardial Mitral Touch System for Mitral Regurgitation (ENRAPT-MR) study demonstrates a first-in-man, off-pump, epicardial repair of secondary MR. Procedural safety and geometric correction of the mitral valve apparatus and LV was achieved. Further studies in the United States are underway.
PMID: 33436291
ISSN: 1097-685x
CID: 4791002

Lung Cancer Survival and Prognosis Is Affected by Lower Airway Oral Commensal Enrichment [Meeting Abstract]

Tsay, J.; Sulaiman, I.; Wu, B.; Gershner, K.; Schluger, R.; Meyn, P.; Li, Y.; Yie, T.; Olsen, E.; Perez, L.; Franca, B.; El-Ashmawy, M.; Li, H.; He, L.; Badri, M.; Morton, J.; Clemente, J.; Shen, N.; Imperato, A.; Scott, A. S.; Bessich, J. L.; Rafeq, S.; Michaud, G. C.; Felner, K.; Sauthoff, H.; Smith, R. L.; Moore, W. H.; Pass, H. I.; Sterman, D. H.; Bonneau, R.; Wong, K.; Papagiannakopoulos, T.; Segal, L. N.
ISI:000556393505233
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 4930102

THE IMPACT OF FRAILTY ON EARLY CHANGES IN PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AFTER TRANSCATHETER TRICUSPID VALVE REPAIR: AN ANALYSIS OF WEARABLE ACTIVITY MONITORING IN THE CLASP TR EARLY FEASIBILITY STUDY [Meeting Abstract]

Green, Philip; Chung, Christine; Murphy, Shannon; Al-Ghusain, Ahmad; Mollenkopf, Sarah; Feldman, Ted; Davidson, Charles; Eleid, Mackram; Kipperman, Robert; Smith, Robert, II; Lim, Scott; Zahr, Firas; Gray, William A.; Greenbaum, Adam; Leon, Martin; Kodali, Susheel K.
ISI:000522979101194
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 5368532

IMPACT OF TRANSCATHETER TRICUSPID VALVE REPAIR ON DAILY PHYSICAL ACTIVITY: AN ANALYSIS OF WEARABLE ACTIVITY MONITORING IN THE CLASP TR EARLY FEASIBILITY STUDY [Meeting Abstract]

Green, Philip; Chung, Christine; Murphy, Shannon; Al-Ghusain, Ahmad; Mollenkopf, Sarah; Feldman, Ted; Davidson, Charles; Eleid, Mackram; Kipperman, Robert; Smith, Robert, II; Lim, Scott; Zahr, Firas; Gray, William A.; Greenbaum, Adam; Leon, Martin; Kodali, Susheel K.
ISI:000522979101195
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 5368542