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Transcatheter Aortic-Valve Implantation for Aortic Stenosis in Patients Who Cannot Undergo Surgery
7.114
Zitationen
22
Autoren
2010
Jahr
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many patients with severe aortic stenosis and coexisting conditions are not candidates for surgical replacement of the aortic valve. Recently, transcatheter aortic-valve implantation (TAVI) has been suggested as a less invasive treatment for high-risk patients with aortic stenosis. METHODS: We randomly assigned patients with severe aortic stenosis, whom surgeons considered not to be suitable candidates for surgery, to standard therapy (including balloon aortic valvuloplasty) or transfemoral transcatheter implantation of a balloon-expandable bovine pericardial valve. The primary end point was the rate of death from any cause. RESULTS: A total of 358 patients with aortic stenosis who were not considered to be suitable candidates for surgery underwent randomization at 21 centers (17 in the United States). At 1 year, the rate of death from any cause (Kaplan–Meier analysis) was 30.7% with TAVI, as compared with 50.7% with standard therapy (hazard ratio with TAVI, 0.55; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.40 to 0.74; P<0.001). The rate of the composite end point of death from any cause or repeat hospitalization was 42.5% with TAVI as compared with 71.6% with standard therapy (hazard ratio, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.35 to 0.59; P<0.001). Among survivors at 1 year, the rate of cardiac symptoms (New York Heart Association class III or IV) was lower among patients who had undergone TAVI than among those who had received standard therapy (25.2% vs. 58.0%, P<0.001). At 30 days, TAVI, as compared with standard therapy, was associated with a higher incidence of major strokes (5.0% vs. 1.1%, P=0.06) and major vascular complications (16.2% vs. 1.1%, P<0.001). In the year after TAVI, there was no deterioration in the functioning of the bioprosthetic valve, as assessed by evidence of stenosis or regurgitation on an echocardiogram. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with severe aortic stenosis who were not suitable candidates for surgery, TAVI, as compared with standard therapy, significantly reduced the rates of death from any cause, the composite end point of death from any cause or repeat hospitalization, and cardiac symptoms, despite the higher incidence of major strokes and major vascular events. (Funded by Edwards Lifesciences; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00530894.).
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Autoren
- Martin B. Leon
- Craig R. Smith
- Michael J. Mack
- D. Craig Miller
- Jeffrey W. Moses
- Lars G. Svensson
- E. Murat Tuzcu
- John G. Webb
- Gregory P. Fontana
- Raj Makkar
- David L. Brown
- Peter C. Block
- Robert A. Guyton
- Augusto D. Pichard
- Joseph E. Bavaria
- Howard C. Herrmann
- Pamela S. Douglas
- John L. Petersen
- Jodi J. Akin
- William N. Anderson
- Duolao Wang
- Stuart Pocock
Institutionen
- NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital(US)
- New York Hospital Queens(US)
- Columbia University Irving Medical Center(US)
- Medical City Dallas Hospital(US)
- Stanford University(US)
- Cleveland Clinic(US)
- St. Paul's Hospital(CA)
- University of British Columbia(CA)
- Cedars-Sinai Medical Center(US)
- Emory University(US)
- MedStar Washington Hospital Center(US)
- Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania(US)
- Duke Medical Center(US)
- Edwards Lifesciences (United States)(US)
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine(GB)