| Literature DB >> 21216739 |
Martin B Leon1, Nicolo Piazza, Eugenia Nikolsky, Eugene H Blackstone, Donald E Cutlip, Arie Pieter Kappetein, Mitchell W Krucoff, Michael Mack, Roxana Mehran, Craig Miller, Marie-Angèle Morel, John Petersen, Jeffrey J Popma, Johanna J M Takkenberg, Alec Vahanian, Gerrit-Anne van Es, Pascal Vranckx, John G Webb, Stephan Windecker, Patrick W Serruys.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To propose standardized consensus definitions for important clinical endpoints in transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI), investigations in an effort to improve the quality of clinical research and to enable meaningful comparisons between clinical trials. To make these consensus definitions accessible to all stakeholders in TAVI clinical research through a peer reviewed publication, on behalf of the public health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21216739 PMCID: PMC3021388 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehq406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
Mortality
| Cardiovascular mortality |
|---|
| Any one of the following criteria: |
| Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, cardiac tamponade, worsening heart failure) |
| Unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause |
| All procedure-related deaths, including those related to a complication of the procedure or treatment for a complication of the procedure |
| Death caused by non-coronary vascular conditions such as crebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular disease |
Myocardial infarction
| Peri-procedural MI (≤72 h After the index procedure) |
| New ischaemic symptoms (e.g. chest pain or shortness of breath), or new ischaemic signs (e.g. ventricular arrhythmias, new or worsening heart failure, new ST-segment changes, haemodynamic instability, or imaging evidence of new loss of viable myocardium or new wall motion abnormality), |
| AND |
| Elevated cardiac biomarkers (preferably CK-MB) within 72 h after the index procedure, consisting of two or more post-procedure samples that are >6–8 h apart with a 20% increase in the second sample and a peak value exceeding 10x the 99th percentile upper reference limit (URL), or a peak value exceeding 5x the 99th percentile URL with new pathological Q waves in at least two contiguous leads. |
| Spontaneous MI (>72 h after the index procedure) |
| Any one of the following criteria: |
| Detection of rise and/or fall of cardiac biomarkers (preferably troponin) with at least one value above the 99th percentile URL, together with evidence of myocardial ischaemia with at least one of the following: |
| ECG changes indicative of new ischaemia [new ST-T changes or new left bundle branch block (LBBB)] |
| New pathological Q waves in at least two contiguous leads |
| Imaging evidence of new loss of viable myocardium or new wall motion abnormality |
| Sudden, unexpected cardiac death, involving cardiac arrest, often with symptoms suggestive of myocardial ischaemia, and accompanied by presumably new ST elevation, or new LBBB, and/or evidence of fresh thrombus by coronary angiography and/or at autopsy, but death occurring before blood samples could be obtained, or at a time before the appearance of cardiac biomarkers in the blood. |
| Pathological findings of an acute myocardial infarction. |
Stroke
| Stroke diagnostic criteria |
| Rapid onset of a focal or global neurological deficit with at least one of the following: change in level of consciousness, hemiplegia, hemiparesis, numbness or sensory loss affecting one side of the body, dysphasia or aphasia, haemianopia, amaurosis fugax, or other neurological signs or symptoms consistent with stroke |
| Duration of a focal or global neurological deficit ≥24 h; OR < 24 h, if therapeutic intervention(s) were performed (e.g. thrombolytic therapy or intracranial angioplasty); OR available neuroimaging documents a new haemorrhage or infarct; OR the neurological deficit results in death |
| No other readily identifiable non-stroke cause for the clinical presentation (e.g. brain tumour, trauma, infection, hypoglycaemia, peripheral lesion, pharmacological influences)a |
| Confirmation of the diagnosis by at least one of the following: |
| Neurology or neurosurgical specialist |
| Neuroimaging procedure (MR or CT scan or cerebral angiography) |
| Lumbar puncture (i.e. spinal fluid analysis diagnostic of intracranial haemorrhage) |
| Stroke definitions |
| Transient ischaemic attack: |
| New focal neurological deficit with rapid symptom resolution (usually 1–2 h), always within 24 h |
| Neuroimaging without tissue injury |
| Stroke: (diagnosis as above, preferably with positive neuroimaging study) |
| Minor—Modified Rankin score <2 at 30 and 90 daysb |
| Major—Modified Rankin score ≥2 at 30 and 90 days |
aPatients with non-focal global encephalopathy will not be reported as a stroke without unequivocal evidence based upon neuroimaging studies.
bModified Rankin Score assessments should be made by qualified individuals according to a certification process. If there is discordance between the 30 and 90 day Modified Rankin Scores, a final determination of major vs. minor stroke will be adjudicated by the neurology members of the clinical events committee.
Bleeding
| Life-threatening or disabling bleeding |
| Fatal bleeding OR |
| Bleeding in a critical area or organ, such as intracranial, intraspinal, intraocular, or pericardial necessitating pericardiocentesis, or intramuscular with compartment syndrome OR |
| Bleeding causing hypovolemic shock or severe hypotension requiring vasopressors or surgery OR |
| Overt source of bleeding with drop in haemoglobin of ≥5 g/dL or whole blood or packed red blood cells (RBCs) transfusion ≥4 unitsa |
| Major bleeding |
| Overt bleeding either associated with a drop in the haemoglobin level of at least 3.0 g/dL or requiring transfusion of two or three units of whole blood/RBC AND |
| Does not meet criteria of life-threatening or disabling bleeding |
| Minor Bleeding |
| Any bleeding worthy of clinical mention (e.g. access site haematoma) that does not qualify as life-threatening, disabling or major |
aGiven one unit of packed RBC typically will raise blood haemoglobin concentration by 1 g/dL, an estimated decrease in haemoglobin will be calculated.
Acute kidney injury (modified RIFLE classification)
| Change in serum creatinine (up to 72 h) compared with baseline |
|---|
| Stage 1 Increase in serum creatinine to 150–200% (1.5–2.0 × increase compared with baseline) or increase of ≥0.3 mg/dL (≥26.4 µmol/L) |
| Stage 2 Increase in serum creatinine to 200–300% (2.0–3.0 × increase compared with baseline) or increase between >0.3 mg/dL (>26.4 µmol/L) and <4.0 mg/dL (<354 µmol/L) |
| Stage 3a Increase in serum creatinine to ≥300% (>3 × increase compared with baseline) or serum creatinine of ≥4.0 mg/dL (≥354 µmol/L) with an acute increase of at least 0.5 mg/dL (44 µmol/L) |
aPatients receiving renal replacement therapy are considered to meet Stage 3 criteria irrespective of other criteria.
Vascular access site and access-related complications
| Major vascular complications |
| Any thoracic aortic dissection |
| Access site or access-related vascular injury (dissection, stenosis, perforation, rupture, arterio-venous fistula, pseudoaneurysm, haematoma, irreversible nerve injury, or compartment syndrome) leading to either death, need for significant blood transfusions (≥4 units), unplanned percutaneous or surgical intervention, or irreversible end-organ damage (e.g. hypogastric artery occlusion causing visceral ischaemia or spinal artery injury causing neurological impairment) |
| Distal embolization (non-cerebral) from a vascular source requiring surgery or resulting in amputation or irreversible end-organ damage |
| Minor vascular complications |
| Access site or access-related vascular injury (dissection, stenosis, perforation, rupture, arterio-venous fistula or pseudoaneuysms requiring compression or thrombin injection therapy, or haematomas requiring transfusion of ≥2 but <4 units) not requiring unplanned percutaneous or surgical intervention and not resulting in irreversible end-organ damage |
| Distal embolization treated with embolectomy and/or thrombectomy and not resulting in amputation or irreversible end-organ damage |
| Failure of percutaneous access site closure resulting in interventional (e.g. stent-graft) or surgical correction and not associated with death, need for significant blood transfusions (≥4 units), or irreversible end-organ damage |
Potential failure modes of prosthetic valve dysfunction
| Aortic stenosis |
| Stent creep |
| Pannus |
| Calcification |
| Support structure deformation (out-of-round configuration), under-expansion, fracture, or trauma (cardio-pulmonary resuscitation, blunt chest trauma) |
| Mal-sizing (prosthesis-patient mismatch) |
| Endocarditis |
| Prosthetic valve thrombosis |
| Native leaflet prolapse impeding prosthetic leaflet motion |
| Aortic regurgitation |
| Pannus |
| Calcification |
| Support structure deformation (out-of-round configuration), recoil, under-expansion, fracture, insufficient radial strength, or trauma (cardio-pulmonary resuscitation, blunt chest trauma) |
| Endocarditis |
| Prosthetic valve thrombosis |
| Malposition (too high, too low) |
| Acute mal-coaptation |
| Leaflet wear, tear/perforation, prolapse, or retraction |
| Suture breakage or disruption |
| Native leaflet prolapse impeding prosthetic leaflet motion |
Prosthetic aortic valve stenosis criteriaa
| Parameter | Normal | Possible stenosis | Significant stenosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peak velocity (m/s)b | <3 | 3–4 | >4 |
| Mean gradient (mmHg)b | <20 | 20–35 | >35 |
| Doppler velocity index | ≥0.30 | 0.29–0.25 | <0.25 |
| Effective orifice area (cm2) | >1.2 | 1.2–0.8 | <0.80 |
| Contour of the jet velocity through the prosthetic valve | Triangular, early peaking | Triangular to intermediate | Rounded, symmetrical contour |
| Acceleration time (ms) | <80 | 80–100 | >100 |
aIn conditions of normal or near normal stroke volume (50–70 mL).
bThese parameters are more affected by flow, including concomitant aortic regurgitation.
Prosthetic aortic valve regurgitation criteria (central and paravalvular)
| Parameter | Mild | Moderate | Severe |
|---|---|---|---|
| Valve structure and motion | |||
| Mechanical or bioprosthetic | Usually normal | Usually abnormal | Usually abnormal |
| Structural parameters | |||
| Left ventricular size | Normal | Normal/mildly dilated | Dilated |
| Doppler parameters (qualitative or semi-quantitative) | |||
| Jet width in central jets (% LVO diameter): colora | Narrow (≤25%) | Intermediate (26–64%) | Large (≥65%) |
| Jet density: CW Doppler | Incomplete or faint | Dense | Dense |
| Jet deceleration rate (PHT, ms): CW Dopplerb | Slow (>500) | Variable (200–500) | Steep (<200) |
| LV outflow vs. pulmonary flow: PW Doppler | Slightly increased | Intermediate | Greatly increased |
| Diastolic flow reversal in the descending aorta: | |||
| PW Doppler | Absent or brief early diastolic | Intermediate | Prominent, holodiastolic |
| Circumferential extent of paraprosthetic AR (%)c | <10 | 10–20 | >20 |
| Doppler parameters (quantitative) | |||
| Regurgitant volume (mL/beat) | <30 | 30–59 | >60 |
| Regurgitant fraction (%) | <30 | 30–50 | >50 |
aParameter applicable to central jets and is less accurate in eccentric jets.
bInfluenced by left ventricular compliance.
cFor paravalvular aortic regurgitation.
AR, aortic regurgitation; CW, continuous wave; LVO, left ventricular outflow; PW, pulsed wave.
Composite endpoints
| Device success |
| Successful vascular access, delivery and deployment of the device and successful retrieval of the delivery system |
| Correct position of the device in the proper anatomical location |
| Intended performance of the prosthetic heart valve (aortic valve area >1.2 cm2 and mean aortic valve gradient <20 mmHg or peak velocity <3 m/s, without moderate or severe prosthetic valve AR) |
| Only one valve implanted in the proper anatomical location |
| Combined safety endpoint (at 30 days) |
| All-cause mortality |
| Major stroke |
| Life-threatening (or disabling) bleeding |
| Acute kidney injury—Stage 3 (including renal replacement therapy) |
| Peri-procedural MI |
| Major vascular complication |
| Repeat procedure for valve-related dysfunction (surgical or interventional therapy) |
| Combined efficacy endpoint (at 1 year or longer) |
| All-cause mortality (after 30 days) |
| Failure of current therapy for AS, requiring hospitalization for symptoms of valve-related or cardiac decompensation |
| Prosthetic heart valve dysfunction (aortic valve area <1.2 cm2 and mean aortic valve gradient ≥20 mmHg or peak velocity ≥3 m/s, OR moderate or severe prosthetic valve AR) |