Background: Transcatheter aortic valve in valve (Aviv) replacement has been shown to be an effective therapeutic option in patients with failed aortic bioprosthetic valves. This review intended to ...evaluate contemporary 1-year outcomes of Aviv in recent studies. Methods: A systematic review on outcomes of Aviv was performed using the best available evidence from studies obtained using a MEDLINE, Cochrane database, and SCOPUS search. Endpoints of interest were survival, coronary artery obstruction, prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM), stroke, pacemaker implantation, and structural valve deterioration. Results: A total of 3339 patients from 23 studies were included. Mean age was 68-80 years, 20%-50% were female, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons score ranged from 5.7 to 31.1. Thirty-day all-cause mortality ranged from 2% to 8%, and 1-year all-cause mortality ranged from 8% to 33%. Coronary artery obstruction risk after Aviv ranged from 0.6% to 4%. One-year stroke ranged from 2% to 8%. Moderate-severe PPM occurred in 11%-58%, and pacemaker rate at 1 year ranged from 5% to 12%. Conclusion: Transcatheter aortic ViV has emerged as an effective therapeutic option to treat patients with failed bioprostheses. The acceptable complication rate and favorable 1-year outcomes make Aviv an appropriate alternative to redo surgical aortic valve replacement.
Women presenting to the cardiac catheterization laboratory with normal coronary arteries without significant atherosclerotic disease is a common presentation. In such patients, it is important to ...maintain a wide differential and consider alternate diagnoses. We present two cases of women presenting with chest pain found to have severe coronary vasospasm in the setting of recent initiation of phentermine. Phentermine may have vasospastic proprieties which are important to consider when prescribing to patients.
Background
Transcatheter aortic valve‐in‐valve replacement (ViV) has been widely accepted as a less invasive alternative to treat failed aortic surgical or transcatheter bioprosthetic valves. ...Angulated aortas present an additional challenge, particularly when using self‐expanding transcatheter heart valves (SE‐THV).
Methods
Two patients with failed surgical bioprosthetic aortic valves and one patient with a failed transcatheter bioprosthetic aortic valve underwent transcatheter aortic ViV using SE‐THV. All were deemed high‐risk for surgical aortic valve replacement by a heart team. All three patients had initial failed SE‐THV delivery using a conventional approach with subsequent successful delivery using the endovascular snare technique.
Results
In Cases 1 and 2, the SE‐THV was biased towards the greater curve of the angulated aorta and behind the outer frame of the bioprosthetic valve frame. An endovascular snare was deployed through a secondary left femoral artery access, and the valve delivery system was advanced through the snare in the ascending aorta. The snare was tightened around the SE‐THV capsule proximal to the hat‐marker, allowing deflection of the SE‐THV and successful delivery. In Case 3, the SE‐THV interacted with the tall frame of a failed SE‐THV. A snare via the left femoral artery was deployed in the descending artery. The SE‐THV was advanced through the snare, and both the snare and SE‐THV were advanced together to the ascending aorta where the SE‐THV was deflected and successfully delivered.
Conclusions
The endovascular snare technique is a feasible option for successful delivery of SE‐THV during transcatheter aortic ViV in failed transcatheter or surgical bioprosthetic valves in angulated aortas.
Objectives
To assess the impact of pulmonary hypertension (PH) on outcomes of patients with severe mitral annular calcification (MAC) undergoing transcatheter mitral valve replacement (TMVR).
...Background
PH is associated with poor outcomes after mitral valve surgery. Whether the presence of PH in patients with MAC undergoing (TMVR) is associated with poor outcomes, is unknown.
Methods
Retrospective evaluation of 116 patients from 51 centers in 11 countries who underwent TMVR with valve in mitral annular calcification (ViMAC) using balloon‐expandable aortic transcatheter valves (THVs) from September 2012 to March 2017. Pulmonary artery systolic blood pressure (PASP) by echocardiogram was available in 90 patients. The subjects were stratified based on PASP: No PH = PASP ≤35 mmHg (n = 11); mild to moderate PH = PASP 36–49 mmHg (n = 21) and severe PH = PASP ≥50 mmHg (n = 58). Clinical, procedural, and echocardiographic outcomes were assessed.
Results
Mean age was 72.7 (±12.8) years, 59 (65.6%) were female, Society of Thoracic Surgeons score was 15.8 + 11.8% and 90.0% where in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III–IV. There was no significant difference in all‐cause mortality at 30 days (no PH = 27.3%, mild–moderate PH = 19.0%, severe PH = 31.6%; p = 0.55) or at 1 year (no PH = 54.5%, mild–moderate PH = 38.1%, severe PH = 56.1%; p = 0.36). No difference in adverse events, NYHA class or amount of residual mitral regurgitation at 1 year were observed between the groups.
Conclusion
This study suggests that the presence of PH in patients with predominantly mitral stenosis with MAC undergoing TMVR does not impact mortality or adverse events. Further studies are needed to fully understand the effect of PH in this group of patients.
Aortic valve calcium score is associated with hemodynamic severity of aortic stenosis. Whether this association is present in calcific mitral stenosis remains unknown.
This study was a retrospective ...analysis of consecutive patients with mitral stenosis secondary to mitral annular calcification (MAC) undergoing transseptal catheterization. All patients underwent invasive mitral valve assessment via direct left atrial and left ventricular pressure measurement. Computed tomography within 1 year of cardiac catheterization and with adequate visualization of the mitral annulus was included. MAC calcium score quantification by Agatston method was obtained offline using dedicated software (Aquarius, TeraRecon, V.4). Median patient age was 66.9±11.2 years, 47% of patients were women, 50% had coronary artery disease, 40% had atrial fibrillation, 47% had prior cardiac surgery, and 33% had prior chest radiation. Median diastolic mitral valve gradient was 9.4±3.4 mm Hg on echocardiography and 8.5±4 mm Hg invasively. Invasive median mitral valve area using the Gorlin formula was 1.87±0.9 cm
. Median MAC calcium score for the cohort was 7280±7937 Hounsfield units. MAC calcium score correlated with the presence of atrial fibrillation (
=0.02) but was not associated with other comorbidities. There was no correlation between MAC calcium score and mitral valve area (
=0.07;
=0.6) or mitral valve gradient (
=-0.03;
=0.8).
MAC calcium score did not correlate with invasively measured mitral valve gradient and mitral valve area in patients with MAC-related mitral stenosis, suggesting that calcium score should not be used as a surrogate for invasive hemodynamic parameters.
To test whether biological age calculated using deficits, functional impairments, or their combination will provide improved estimation of long-term mortality among older adults undergoing ...percutaneous coronary intervention.
Cardiovascular deficits, noncardiovascular deficits, and functional impairments were prospectively studied in 535 patients aged 55 years or older from August 1, 2014, to March 31, 2018. Models for biological age included deficits (acquired, increase with age, associated with worse prognosis, did not saturate early), functional impairments (subjective-help with daily activities, difficulty with sensory input, continence, weight, balance, mobility; or objective-timed up and go, functional reach), or their combination.
The mean ± SD age of the study patients was 72.1±9.5 years. For every 5-year increase in chronological age, the mean number of cardiovascular deficits increased from 2.36 among patients younger than 70 years to 3.44 in nonagenarians. The mean number of functional impairments increased from 2.15 for those younger than 70 years to 6.74 for nonagenarians. During a median follow-up of 2.05 years, 99 patients died. Significant improvement in the Harrell concordance index (C index) for prediction of long-term all-cause mortality was noted with biological age calculated from deficits and impairments compared with chronological age (0.77 vs 0.65; P<.001) and when estimating biological age via functional impairments alone vs chronological age (0.75 vs 0.65; P<.001) but not via deficits alone (0.71 vs 0.65; P=.08). Biological age estimates from subjective functional impairments captured most of the prognostic information related to all-cause and noncardiac mortality, whereas deficit-based estimation favored cardiovascular mortality.
The derivation of biological age from deficits and functional impairments provides a major improvement in the estimation of survival as estimated by chronological age.
To study the incidence of complications when undergoing right heart catheterization (RHC) and right ventricular biopsy (RVB).
Complications following RHC and RVB are not well reported. We studied the ...incidence of death, myocardial infarction, stroke, unplanned bypass, pneumothorax, hemorrhage, hemoptysis, heart valve repair/replacement, pulmonary artery perforation, ventricular arrhythmias, pericardiocentesis, complete heart block, and deep vein thrombosis (primary endpoint) following these procedures. We also adjudicated the severity of tricuspid regurgitation and causes of in-hospital death following RHC. Diagnostic RHC procedures, RVB, multiple right heart procedures alone or combined with left heart catheterization, and complications from January 1, 2002, through December 31, 2013, were identified using the clinical scheduling system and electronic records at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota. International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision billing codes were used. Registration was queried to identify all-cause mortality. All clinical events and echocardiograms for worsening tricuspid regurgitation were reviewed and adjudicated.
A total of 17,696 procedures were identified. Procedures were categorized into those undergoing RHC (n=5556), RVB (n=3846), multiple right heart catheterization (n=776), and combined right and left heart catheterization procedures (n=7518). Primary endpoint was seen in 21.6 and 20.8 of 10,000 procedures for RHC and RVB, respectively. There were 190 (1.1%) deaths during hospital admission and none was related to the procedure.
Complications following diagnostic RHC and RVB are seen in 21.6 and 20.8 procedures, respectively, of 10,000 procedures and all deaths were secondary to acute illness.