Literature DB >> 35639949

Neochord DS1000 system versus conventional mitral valve repair for correction of mitral regurgitation due to prolapse of the posterior leaflet.

Tirone E David1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  Gore-Tex chord; Mitral regurgitation; Mitral valve repair

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35639949      PMCID: PMC9252108          DOI: 10.1093/icvts/ivac139

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg        ISSN: 1569-9285


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In this issue of the Interactive CardioVascular and Thoracic Surgery, D’Onofrio and colleagues [1] from the University of Padua compared the perioperative and 5-year outcomes of correction of mitral regurgitation (MR) due to posterior leaflet prolapse with Neochord DS1100 (NeoChord, Inc. St. Louis Park, MN, USA) versus conventional mitral valve repair. Patients were enrolled from 2010 to 2018 and after exclusions, the authors had 281 patients available for the study: 169 had Neochord and 112 had surgical repair, suggesting the authors’ preference for Neochord to treat posterior leaflet prolapse. To compensate for discrepancies procedure selection, the authors used a propensity score analysis using preoperative clinical variables believed to affect outcome. They identified 88 pairs of patients with similar clinical profiles except for functional class which was worse in the Neochord group. The patients in this study were younger than in most reports on longitudinal outcomes of mitral valve repair [2, 3]. The chose patients’ survival as the primary endpoint of the study but since a propensity score analysis was used to compensate for differences in age and comorbidities, this does not seem rational. The secondary endpoints of reoperation on the mitral valve and freedom from moderate or severe MR are far more pertinent in this type of comparing procedures to treat MR. Before discharge from hospital, 8 patients in the Neochord and 1 patient in the surgical repair group had moderate or severe MR. The 5-year survival was similar, as one would expect, but the freedom from recurrent MR was only 57.6% in the Neochord group and 84.6% in the surgical repair group, and the freedom from reoperation was 78.9% in the first group and 92% in the second. Neochord DS1100 gained European market approval in 2016 and FDA approval for a randomized clinical trial in the USA in the same year [4]. I have not been able to find any publication on that randomized trial, likely because it is still enrolling patients in spite of the fact that 6 years have passed since its FDA approval [4]. Hopefully, this randomized clinical trial will help us to determine the usefulness of this device. Based on D'Onofrio and colleagues [1] experience and on that of others [3], I am not sure this device should be used in any patient who can have conventional mitral valve repair. There are, however, patients with posterior leaflet prolapse with intractable heart failure that would not tolerate a median sternotomy or even a right mini-thoracotomy with cardiopulmonary bypass and, perhaps, they should be considered for this device but only after excluding the feasibility of a transcatheter Mitraclip™ (Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, IL, USA), which is likely to provide better and safer outcomes [5]. I have been practicing cardiac surgery for over 4 decades and prospectively followed certain groups of my patients. Mitral valve surgery is one of them, and I have over 3000 mitral valve repairs in my database of prospectively followed patients. There are few cardiac procedures that restore lifespan and quality of life as well as mitral valve repair for MR due to leaflet prolapse. I have not lost a single patient during the past 2000 repairs, and in a recent report from out unit [2] the cumulative incidence of reoperation was 4.6% and the cumulative incidence of recurrent moderate or severe MR was 12.5% at 20 years. It would be very difficult for existing available technologies such as NeoChord or Mitraclip to provide similar outcomes.
  4 in total

1.  Randomized Comparison of Percutaneous Repair and Surgery for Mitral Regurgitation: 5-Year Results of EVEREST II.

Authors:  Ted Feldman; Saibal Kar; Sammy Elmariah; Steven C Smart; Alfredo Trento; Robert J Siegel; Patricia Apruzzese; Peter Fail; Michael J Rinaldi; Richard W Smalling; James B Hermiller; David Heimansohn; William A Gray; Paul A Grayburn; Michael J Mack; D Scott Lim; Gorav Ailawadi; Howard C Herrmann; Michael A Acker; Frank E Silvestry; Elyse Foster; Andrew Wang; Donald D Glower; Laura Mauri
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2015-12-29       Impact factor: 24.094

2.  Long-Term Results of Mitral Valve Repair for Regurgitation Due to Leaflet Prolapse.

Authors:  Tirone E David; Carolyn M David; Wendy Tsang; Myriam Lafreniere-Roula; Cedric Manlhiot
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2019-08-27       Impact factor: 24.094

3.  Midterm results of transventricular mitral valve repair: Single-center experience.

Authors:  Mindaugas Budra; Vilius Janušauskas; Agnė Drąsutienė; Aleksejus Zorinas; Diana Zakarkaitė; Artūras Lipnevičius; Kęstutis Ručinskas
Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2021-01-20       Impact factor: 5.209

4.  Transapical beating heart mitral valve repair versus conventional surgery: a propensity-matched study.

Authors:  A D'Onofrio; F Mastro; M Nadali; A Fiocco; D Pittarello; P Aruta; G Evangelista; G Lorenzoni; D Gregori; G Gerosa
Journal:  Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg       Date:  2022-06-15
  4 in total

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