| Literature DB >> 33318751 |
Joel P Giblett1, Lynne K Williams2, Stephen Kyranis2, Leonard M Shapiro2, Patrick A Calvert2.
Abstract
Patent foramen ovale (PFO) is a common abnormality affecting between 20% and 34% of the adult population. For most people, it is a benign finding; however, in some people, the PFO can open widely to enable paradoxical embolus to transit from the venous to arterial circulation, which is associated with stroke and systemic embolisation. Percutaneous closure of the PFO in patients with cryptogenic stroke has been undertaken for a number of years, and a number of purpose-specific septal occluders have been marketed. Recent randomised control trials have demonstrated that closure of PFO in patients with cryptogenic stroke is associated with reduced rates of recurrent stroke. After a brief overview of the anatomy of a PFO, this article considers the evidence for PFO closure in cryptogenic stroke. The article also addresses other potential indications for closure, including systemic arterial embolisation, decompression sickness, platypnoea-orthodeoxia syndrome and migraine with aura. The article lays out the pre-procedural investigations and preparation for the procedure. Finally, the article gives an overview of the procedure itself, including discussion of closure devices.Entities:
Keywords: Stroke; cryptogenic stroke; decompression illness; migraine; patent foramen ovale; patent foramen ovale closure; platypnoea–orthodeoxia syndrome
Year: 2020 PMID: 33318751 PMCID: PMC7726850 DOI: 10.15420/icr.2019.27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interv Cardiol ISSN: 1756-1485
Comparison of Patent Foramen Ovale and Atrial Septal Defects
| Patent Foramen Ovale | Atrial Septal Defect | |
|---|---|---|
| Anatomy | Fusion of primum and secundum atrial septa does not occur as an infant leading to flap valve opening | Congenital failure of overlap of the atrial septa leads to a hole in atrial septum) |
| Shunt | Right to left shunt occurs when right atrial pressure exceeds left atrial pressure (usually transient after rapid rise and fall in thoracic pressure) | Continuous left-to-right (usually) shunting |
| Epidemiology | 20–34% of adult population[ | 1.6/1,000 live births[ |
| Consequences | In most cases there is no clinical consequence and the defect remains undetected | Continuous left-to-right shunt may cause volume loading of right heart, which may reduce long-term survival if not corrected |
Randomised Trials Comparing Patent Foramen Ovale Closure with Medical Therapy
| Study | Year | Device | n | Endpoints | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLOSURE 1[ | 2012 | STARFlex Septal Closure System | 909 | Composite of death (0–30 days), neurological death (≥31 days), stroke or TIA at 2-year follow-up | Non-significant reduction in primary endpoint | Left atrial thrombus formation in closure group |
| PC Trial[ | 2013 | Amplatzer PFO Occluder | 414 | Composite of death, stroke, TIA or peripheral embolism at 4,5 years | Non-significant reduction in primary endpoint | Underpowered trial |
| RESPECT[ | 2013 | Amplatzer PFO Occluder | 980 | Composite of early death, stroke or TIA | Non-significant reduction in primary endpoint at median follow-up 2.1 years | As treated analysis shows a benefit in favour of closure even at the early timepoint. |
| CLOSE[ | 2017 | 11 approved devices (Amplatzer PFO Occluder >50%) | 663 | Fatal or non-fatal stroke | Significant reduction in stroke with occlusion compared with antiplatelet therapy only | 1:1:1 randomisation PFO closure versus antiplatelets versus anti-coagulation |
| Gore REDUCE[ | 2017 | Helex Septal Occluder or Cardioform Septal Occluder | 664 | Co-primary endpoints of clinical stroke and incidence of new brain infarction | Significant reduction in clinical stroke at median follow-up 3.2 years | 2:1 randomisation to PFO closure |
| DEFENSE PFO[ | 2018 | Amplatzer PFO Occluder | 120 | Stroke, vascular death or Major bleeding at 2-year follow-up | Significant reduction in primary endpoint with PFO closure. No events in PFO closure arm versus 12.9% 2-year event rate in medication only arm (p=0.013) |
PFO = patent foramen ovale; TIA = transient ischaemic attack.