Literature DB >> 25317940

Percutaneous treatment of functional mitral regurgitation in heart failure.

Guilherme F Attizzani1, Pedro A Lemos2.   

Abstract

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Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25317940      PMCID: PMC4193063          DOI: 10.5935/abc.20140143

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol        ISSN: 0066-782X            Impact factor:   2.000


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Congestive heart failure (HF) remains one of the most important and challenging clinical problems in cardiovascular medicine in Brazil and worldwide. Evidence suggests that mortality in this setting has decreased in Brazil over recent years[1], which may be related, at least partially, to a more intense and widespread use of neurohormonal blockade (with angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors and beta-blockers) in patients with advanced HF[2]. To better evaluate the characteristics of end-stage heart disease in Brazil, the ongoing I Brazilian Registry of Heart Failure (BREATHE registry) will evaluate the profile of 1,200 patients admitted with decompensated HF to 60 hospitals representative of the different Brazilian regions[3]. Final results of the BREATHE registry are expected to be available within the next months. In spite of recent improvements in medical therapy, advanced HF continues to impose an ominous prognosis; in some subsets, mortality rates can reach up to 30% to 50% in the first year of disease, according to contemporary series of Brazilian centers[4]. In this context, therapeutic alternatives have been intensively investigated in an attempt to improve the outcomes of patients with HF. Mitral regurgitation (MR) is a frequent finding among individuals with end-stage HF[5,6]. Indeed, observational studies revealed that most patients with HF and severe (≥ 3+) MR have functional (74%), rather than degenerative (21%), MR[7]. While surgery is the gold-standard therapy in patients with organic (i.e., degenerative) mitral valve disease associated with symptoms or evidence of left ventricle dysfunction[8], its benefit to patients with MR secondary to underlying ventricular dysfunction (i.e., functional MR) remains unclear[9]. Therefore, individuals with functional MR are frequently referred to isolated clinical management, carrying poor long-term prognosis[7]. Percutaneous mitral valve transcatheter therapies, such as direct and indirect annuloplasty, leaflet repairing devices, and valve replacement, have recently emerged as potential alternatives for patients with MR. Percutaneous edge-to-edge mitral valve repair with the MitraClip system (Abbott Vascular, Abbott Park, Illinois) exhibits the largest body of data available among transcatheter therapies for MR[10]. The procedure has consistently demonstrated to be safe, coupled with efficacious MR reduction, left ventricle reverse remodeling, and improvement in congestive HF symptoms and in the quality of life of patients with either functional or degenerative MR[11,12]. In fact, MitraClip implantation has been approved for commercial use for many years in Europe, but, in the United States, the approval has been recently given. In Brazil, the system has been just approved by the Brazilian Health Surveillance Agency (Anvisa) and is expected to be available in the near future. The only prospective, randomized, controlled trial comparing MitraClip therapy and conventional surgery mostly for patients with organic MR (i.e., EVEREST II trial) has shown that the percutaneous procedure had superior safety and similar improvement in clinical outcomes, although the latter led to more effective reduction in the magnitude of MR[10]. It is currently under intense investigation whether catheter-based therapies could be offered as a minimally invasive strategy also for patients with severe MR secondary to left ventricular dysfunction. Recently, non-randomized studies including high-risk patients with functional MR have confirmed excellent safety and efficacy profiles of MitraClip implantation in more complex clinical scenarios, thus contributing to refine the understanding on the role of this novel therapy in patients with different MR etiologies[13,14]. Minimally invasive catheter-based therapies aimed at correcting (or minimizing) functional MR represent a whole new and promising therapeutic strategy for patients with advanced HF[15]. Notwithstanding its potential, the novel treatment must be scrutinized in the context of studies specifically designed to evaluate its clinical value in improving short- and long-term clinical outcomes.
  15 in total

1.  Prevalence and outcomes of unoperated patients with severe symptomatic mitral regurgitation and heart failure: comprehensive analysis to determine the potential role of MitraClip for this unmet need.

Authors:  Sachin S Goel; Navkaranbir Bajaj; Bhuvnesh Aggarwal; Supriya Gupta; Kanhaiya Lal Poddar; Mobolaji Ige; Hazem Bdair; Abed Anabtawi; Shiraz Rahim; Patrick L Whitlow; E Murat Tuzcu; Brian P Griffin; William J Stewart; Marc Gillinov; Eugene H Blackstone; Nicholas G Smedira; Guilherme H Oliveira; Benico Barzilai; Venu Menon; Samir R Kapadia
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2013-09-11       Impact factor: 24.094

2.  Guidelines on the management of valvular heart disease (version 2012).

Authors:  Alec Vahanian; Ottavio Alfieri; Felicita Andreotti; Manuel J Antunes; Gonzalo Barón-Esquivias; Helmut Baumgartner; Michael Andrew Borger; Thierry P Carrel; Michele De Bonis; Arturo Evangelista; Volkmar Falk; Bernard Iung; Patrizio Lancellotti; Luc Pierard; Susanna Price; Hans-Joachim Schäfers; Gerhard Schuler; Janina Stepinska; Karl Swedberg; Johanna Takkenberg; Ulrich Otto Von Oppell; Stephan Windecker; Jose Luis Zamorano; Marian Zembala
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2012-08-24       Impact factor: 29.983

3.  Rationale and design: BREATHE registry--I Brazilian Registry of Heart Failure.

Authors: 
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 2.000

4.  Percutaneous repair or surgery for mitral regurgitation.

Authors:  Ted Feldman; Elyse Foster; Donald D Glower; Donald G Glower; Saibal Kar; Michael J Rinaldi; Peter S Fail; Richard W Smalling; Robert Siegel; Geoffrey A Rose; Eric Engeron; Catalin Loghin; Alfredo Trento; Eric R Skipper; Tommy Fudge; George V Letsou; Joseph M Massaro; Laura Mauri
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2011-04-04       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  MitraClip® therapy in patients with end-stage systolic heart failure.

Authors:  Olaf Franzen; Jan van der Heyden; Stephan Baldus; Michael Schlüter; Wolfgang Schillinger; Christian Butter; Rainer Hoffmann; Roberto Corti; Giovanni Pedrazzini; Martin J Swaans; Michael Neuss; Volker Rudolph; Daniel Sürder; Jürg Grünenfelder; Christine Eulenburg; Hermann Reichenspurner; Thomas Meinertz; Angelo Auricchio
Journal:  Eur J Heart Fail       Date:  2011-04-06       Impact factor: 15.534

6.  Extended use of percutaneous edge-to-edge mitral valve repair beyond EVEREST (Endovascular Valve Edge-to-Edge Repair) criteria: 30-day and 12-month clinical and echocardiographic outcomes from the GRASP (Getting Reduction of Mitral Insufficiency by Percutaneous Clip Implantation) registry.

Authors:  Guilherme F Attizzani; Yohei Ohno; Davide Capodanno; Stefano Cannata; Fabio Dipasqua; Sebastiano Immé; Sarah Mangiafico; Marco Barbanti; Margherita Ministeri; Anna Cageggi; Anna Maria Pistritto; Sandra Giaquinta; Silvia Farruggio; Marta Chiarandà; Giuseppe Ronsivalle; Audrey Schnell; Salvatore Scandura; Corrado Tamburino; Piera Capranzano; Carmelo Grasso
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2014-12-10       Impact factor: 11.195

7.  Percutaneous mitral valve repair for mitral regurgitation in high-risk patients: results of the EVEREST II study.

Authors:  Donald D Glower; Saibal Kar; Alfredo Trento; D Scott Lim; Tanvir Bajwa; Ramon Quesada; Patrick L Whitlow; Michael J Rinaldi; Paul Grayburn; Michael J Mack; Laura Mauri; Patrick M McCarthy; Ted Feldman
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2014-07-15       Impact factor: 24.094

8.  Impact of mitral valve annuloplasty combined with revascularization in patients with functional ischemic mitral regurgitation.

Authors:  Tomislav Mihaljevic; Buu-Khanh Lam; Jeevanantham Rajeswaran; Masami Takagaki; Michael S Lauer; A Marc Gillinov; Eugene H Blackstone; Bruce W Lytle
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2007-05-18       Impact factor: 24.094

9.  Temporal variation in the prognosis and treatment of advanced heart failure - before and after 2000.

Authors:  Carlos Henrique Del Carlo; Juliano Novaes Cardoso; Marcelo Eidi Ochia; Mucio Tavares de Oliveira; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Antonio Carlos Pereira-Barretto
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2014-04-17       Impact factor: 2.000

10.  A new tissue Doppler index to predict cardiac death in patients with heart failure.

Authors:  Cristian Mornos; Lucian Petrescu; Dragos Cozma; Adina Ionac
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2013-11-12       Impact factor: 2.000

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