scholarly journals Outcome of transcatheter aortic valve replacement in bicuspid aortic valve stenosis with new-generation devices

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-28
Author(s):  
Riccardo Gorla ◽  
Matteo Casenghi ◽  
Alice Finotello ◽  
Federico De Marco ◽  
Simone Morganti ◽  
...  

Abstract OBJECTIVES To compare device success and paravalvular leak rates of 3 new-generation transcatheter aortic valve replacement devices in patients with bicuspid aortic valve stenosis and to test their biomechanical performance in a computer-based simulation model of aortic root with increasing ellipticity. METHODS This retrospective multicentre study included 56 bicuspid aortic valve patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement with new-generation devices: Lotus/Lotus Edge (N = 15; 27%), Evolut-R (N = 20; 36%) and ACURATE neo (N = 21; 37%). Three virtual simulation models of aortic root with increasing index of eccentricity (0–0.25–0.5) were implemented. Stress distribution, stent–root contact area and paravalvular orifice area were computed. RESULTS Device success was achieved in 43/56 patients (77%) with comparable rates among Lotus (87%), Evolut-R (60%) and ACURATE neo (86%; P = 0.085). Moderate paravalvular leak rate was significantly lower in the Lotus group as compared to Evolut-R group (0% vs 30%; P = 0.027) and comparable to the ACURATE neo group (0% vs 10%; P = 0.33). By index of eccentricity = 0.5, Lotus showed a uniform and symmetric pattern of stress distribution with absent paravalvular orifice area, ACURATE neo showed a mild asymmetry with small paravalvular orifice area (1.1 mm2), whereas a severely asymmetric pattern was evident with Evolut-R, resulting in a large paravalvular orifice area (12.0 mm2). CONCLUSIONS Transcatheter aortic valve replacement in bicuspid aortic valve patients with new-generation devices showed comparable device success rates. Lotus showed moderate paravalvular leak rate comparable to that of ACURATE neo and significantly lower than Evolut-R. On simulation, Lotus and ACURATE neo showed optimal adaptability to elliptic anatomies as compared to Evolut-R.

2021 ◽  
Vol 42 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
L Kalinczuk ◽  
G S Mintz ◽  
Z Chmielak ◽  
M Dabrowski ◽  
P Stoklosa ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Valve frame expansion (measured outer valve frame area/nominal valve dimension), but not oversizing (nominal valve dimension/annulus area, %) determines pattern of restored blood flow after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). There is no online measure of frame expansion, and error in current echocardiographic assessment of effective orifice area (EOA) and paravalvular leak (PVL) are common. Purpose To evaluate large imaging field intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) during TAVR for measuring valve geometry [frame expansion, minimal geometric orifice area (min GOA), and mechanism of PVL] with transthoracic echo and angio-CT serving for comparative measures, along with the nominal EOA as established by Hahn et al. Methods After successful TAVR either a 10MHz Vision PV 0.035" (60mm imaging field) or 20MHz Vision PV 0.018" (24mm imaging field plus Chr omaFlo) IVUS catheter (Philips) was slowly pulled from the left ventricle outflow (LVOT) to the aorta with continuous imaging of the aortic root. Results There were 16 pts (80.8±7.1 yrs, 8 female) treated for de novo aortic stenosis (n=15) or failed bioprosthesis (n=1), 7 of whom were treated with balloon-expandable TAVR. PV 0.35" catheters were used in 8 pts (including valve-in-valve) and allowed complete geometry assessment of 26.6±2.7mm nominal prosthesis Ø (Figure 1A) whereas PV 0.018" allowed complete geometry assessment in only 4 of 8 pts with nominal prosthesis Ø of 26.1±2.8mm (Figure 1B). Actual % valve inflow expansion (IVUS outer frame/valve nominal dimension) was significantly smaller than % valve oversizing (80%±19% vs 125±19%, p=0.005). Min GOA was substantially bigger than corresponding nominal EOA and EOA calculated using the post-procedural LVOT diameter (272±84mm2 vs 174±25mm2 vs 181±59mm2, p=0.001 correspondingly). However, min GOA was similar to EOA calculated using baseline LVOT area (272±84mm2 vs 230±90mm2; r=0.713, p=0.009). IVUS and angio-CT measurements of outer prosthesis frame area were similar for inflow, coaptation site, and outflow (460±143mm2 vs 454±134mm2 and 455±134mm2 vs 447±114mm2 and 722±174mm2 vs 725±180; p≤0.001 for all paired correlations). Inflow expansion (IVUS outer frame/baseline CT annulus area) tended to be smaller among valves with ≥mild vs no PVL (95±14% vs 107±11%, p=0.156), with clear ChromaFlo signal seen in the space between the aortic annulus wall and outer-valve frame surface (Figure 1C). Conclusions Large imaging field IVUS during TAVR allows for peri-procedural assessment of actual valve geometry that differs substantially from nominal. IVUS offers online tomographic perspective and highest accuracy in anatomy evaluation corresponding with valve function. FUNDunding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None. Figure 1


2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (Supplement) ◽  
pp. 705-708 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koichi Maeda ◽  
Toru Kuratani ◽  
Kei Torikai ◽  
Kazuo Shimamura ◽  
Takayoshi Ueno ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document