BACKGROUND: There is accumulating evidence that up to 20% of the implanted devices after TAVI are associated with a significant degree of paravalvular leaks, which appear to be associated with a negative clinical outcome. METHODS: A total of 355 patients with severe aortic valvular stenosis (AVS) were treated by TAVI (Corevalve n = 222, Edwards Sapien n = 133). Survival, NT-proBNP and the grade of PVL were quantified up to 12 months after implantation. RESULTS: Technical success rate was 97.8%. Thirty-day mortality was 9.6%. Post-procedural transvalvular aortic regurgitation was seen only in a minority of cases (5%), whereas PVL were frequently observed (grade: <1+ in 58.2%, ≥1-<2 in 33.9%, and ≥2 in 7.9%). There was a clear relation-ship between PVL and adverse outcome (P < 0.001). After a transient increase, NT-proBNP showed a significant decline. Interestingly, a PVL ≥2+ was associated with a much higher rise in NT-proBNP compared to the other groups (P < 0.01), and a post-procedural increase in NT-proBNP by more than 1640 ng L(-1) within 5 days was associated with a significant increase in rate of death (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: TAVI is an efficient treatment option for high-risk patients with severe AVS. The incidence of PVL is an inacceptable clinical problem. Serial measurement of NT-proBNP can be used for risk-stratification in patients with a significant PVL. In general, PVL graded ≥2+ is associated with a dramatically increased 6-month mortality. Therefore, any action to reduce paraprosthetical regurgitation is highly recommended.
BACKGROUND: There is accumulating evidence that up to 20% of the implanted devices after TAVI are associated with a significant degree of paravalvular leaks, which appear to be associated with a negative clinical outcome. METHODS: A total of 355 patients with severe aortic valvular stenosis (AVS) were treated by TAVI (Corevalve n = 222, Edwards Sapien n = 133). Survival, NT-proBNP and the grade of PVL were quantified up to 12 months after implantation. RESULTS: Technical success rate was 97.8%. Thirty-day mortality was 9.6%. Post-procedural transvalvular aortic regurgitation was seen only in a minority of cases (5%), whereas PVL were frequently observed (grade: <1+ in 58.2%, ≥1-<2 in 33.9%, and ≥2 in 7.9%). There was a clear relation-ship between PVL and adverse outcome (P < 0.001). After a transient increase, NT-proBNP showed a significant decline. Interestingly, a PVL ≥2+ was associated with a much higher rise in NT-proBNP compared to the other groups (P < 0.01), and a post-procedural increase in NT-proBNP by more than 1640 ng L(-1) within 5 days was associated with a significant increase in rate of death (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: TAVI is an efficient treatment option for high-risk patients with severe AVS. The incidence of PVL is an inacceptable clinical problem. Serial measurement of NT-proBNP can be used for risk-stratification in patients with a significant PVL. In general, PVL graded ≥2+ is associated with a dramatically increased 6-month mortality. Therefore, any action to reduce paraprosthetical regurgitation is highly recommended.
Authors: Neil Ruparelia; Vasileios F Panoulas; Angela Frame; Ben Ariff; Nilesh Sutaria; Michael Fertleman; Jonathan Cousins; Jon Anderson; Colin Bicknell; Andrew Chukwuemeka; Sayan Sen; Iqbal S Malik; Antonio Colombo; Ghada W Mikhail Journal: World J Cardiol Date: 2016-07-26
Authors: Patrycjusz Stokłosa; Piotr Szymański; Maciej Dąbrowski; Dariusz Zakrzewski; Piotr Michałek; Ewa Orłowska-Baranowska; Kamal El-Hassan; Zbigniew Chmielak; Adam Witkowski; Tomasz Hryniewiecki Journal: Postepy Kardiol Interwencyjnej Date: 2015-03-06 Impact factor: 1.426
Authors: Maciej Haberka; Magdalena Malczewska; Piotr Pysz; Michał Kozłowski; Wojciech Wojakowski; Grzegorz Smolka Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson Date: 2021-03-22 Impact factor: 5.364