| Literature DB >> 35832535 |
Won-Keun Kim1, Holger Thiele2, Axel Linke3, Thomas Kuntze4, Stephan Fichtlscherer5, John Webb6, Michael W A Chu7, Matti Adam8, Gerhard Schymik9, Tobias Geisler10, Rajesh Kharbanda11, Thomas Christen12, Dominic Allocco12.
Abstract
Objectives: The PROGRESS PVL registry evaluated transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) in patients treated with ACURATE neo, a supra-annular self-expanding bioprosthetic aortic valve. Background: While clinical outcomes with TAVI are comparable with those achieved with surgery, residual aortic regurgitation (AR) and paravalvular leak (PVL) are common complications. The ACURATE neo valve has a pericardial sealing skirt designed to minimize PVL.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35832535 PMCID: PMC9252754 DOI: 10.1155/2022/9138403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interv Cardiol ISSN: 0896-4327 Impact factor: 1.776
Figure 1The ACURATE neo valve. The ACURATE neo valve is comprised of three porcine pericardial leaflets sewn into a self-expanding nitinol frame with three axial stabilization arches. The supra-annular positioning contributes to low gradients. The pericardial skirt is designed to minimize paravalvular leak.
Figure 2PROGRESS PVL study flow.
Procedural outcomes.
| Variable | ITT population ( |
|---|---|
| Total time from first puncture to time of transfemoral access site closure (min) | 56.7 ± 26.8 (499) |
| Total time from insertion of delivery system to removal of delivery system (min) | 10.2 ± 11.6 (491) |
| Valve size implanted | |
| S | 19.6% (98) |
| M | 38.8% (194) |
| L | 41.6% (208) |
| Balloon predilatation | 91.4% (457) |
| Postdilatation | 45.2% (226) |
| Correct positioning of a single valve in the proper location | 98.6% (493) |
| Procedural mortality† | 0.2% (1) |
| Periprocedural myocardial infarction (≤72 h)‡ | 0.8% (4) |
| Major vascular complications | 2.8% (14) |
| Life-threatening/disabling bleeding | 0.8% (4) |
| Valve-in-valve implant^ | 0.8% (4/500) |
| Surgical aortic valve replacement | 0.0% (0/500) |
| Unplanned use of cardiopulmonary bypass | 0.0% (0/500) |
| Coronary obstruction requiring intervention | 0.0% (0/500) |
| Ventricular septal perforation | 0.0% (0/500) |
| Cardiac tamponade | 0.0% (0/500) |
| Endocarditis | 0.0% (0/500) |
| Valve embolization | 0.2% (1/500) |
| Valve thrombosis | 0.0% (0/500) |
Data are % (n) or mean ± standard deviation (n). Two patients from the ITT population were not implanted with ACURATE neo. † ACURATE neo valve lost contact with the annulus; patient was treated valve-in-valve with a nonstudy valve, experienced cardiogenic shock, and died the same day as the index procedure. ‡Intra-procedural myocardial infarction, n = 2 (STEMI, n = 1; NSTEMI, n = 1).
Figure 3Improvement in aortic regurgitation. (a) The primary endpoint of PROGRESS PVL was the rate of total aortic regurgitation (AR), assessed by an independent echocardiography laboratory at discharge/7 days, 30 days, and 12 months in patients treated with ACURATE neo. Paravalvular leak (PVL) was very similar to total AR at all time points. (b, c) Paired analyses performed in patients with data available at both discharge and 12 months (N = 209) demonstrated significant overall improvement in PVL (P < 0.001; Bhapkar's test for marginal homogeneity), with a greater proportion of patients showing interindividual improvement in PVL compared with worsening PVL. All echocardiographic data were assessed by a core laboratory.
Figure 4Change in valve hemodynamics. (a) Patients treated with ACURATE neo demonstrated improvements in mean aortic valve gradient and mean effective orifice area through 12-month follow-up, as assessed by an independent echocardiography laboratory. (b) Paired analyses of core laboratory data at discharge, 30 days, and 12 months demonstrate early hemodynamic improvement on a per-subject basis, which was maintained through 12 months.
Clinical safety outcomes.
| Variable | 30 days | 12 months |
|---|---|---|
| VARC-2 composite early safety | 9.2% (46) | — |
|
| 2.2% (11) | 11.3% (54) |
| Cardiovascular death | 2.0% (10) | 7.1% (34) |
| Noncardiovascular death | 0.2% (1) | 4.2% (20) |
|
| 2.6% (13) | 3.6% (17) |
| Disabling Stroke | 2.4% (12) | 3.1% (15) |
| Nondisabling Stroke | 0.2% (1) | 0.4% (2) |
|
| 3.6% (18) | 4.0% (19) |
|
| 1.4% (7) | 3.4% (16) |
| Myocardial infarction (>72 h postprocedure) | 0.0% (0) | 1.0% (5) |
|
| 0.8% (4) | 1.0% (5) |
| New permanent pacemaker implantation | ||
| All patients | 10.2% (51) | 12.2% (58) |
| Pacemaker-naive patients ( | 11.6% (51) | 13.4% (57) |
| New onset of atrial fibrillation/flutter | 5.2% (26) | 7.5% (36) |
| Valve malpositioning† | 1.4% (7) | 1.5% (7) |
|
| 0.0% (0) | 0.0% (0) |
| Ventricular septal perforation | 0.0% (0) | 0.0% (0) |
| Cardiac tamponade | 0.0% (0) | 0.0% (0) |
|
| 1.2% (6) | 1.7% (8)‡ |
| Prosthetic valve endocarditis | 0.0% (0) | 0.8% (4) |
| Prosthetic valve thrombosis | 0.0% (0) | 0.2% (1) |
Data are % (n), reported for the ITT population (N = 500). Component of VARC-2 composite endpoint for early safety at 30 days. † Includes valve migration, valve embolization, ectopic valve deployment; ‡Two patients were treated with a repeat procedure after 30 days. In one patient, the 30-day follow-up TEE revealed reduced LVEF with persistent moderate PVL; balloon valvuloplasty was performed but did not improve aortic valve insufficiency, and patient underwent SAVR. One patient experienced endocarditis and associated dissection of the ascending aorta on day 89 post-TAVI; SAVR was performed to replace the ACURATE neo valve.
Figure 5Improvement in functional status. Improvement in functional status, based on New York heart association (NYHA) functional class, was evident at discharge and sustained through 12 months of follow-up. Analysis includes surviving subjects treated with ACURATE neo who had functional status recorded at a given time point.