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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Feasibility of a MPR-based 3DTEE guidance protocol for transcatheter direct mitral valve annuloplasty.
Angela KornbergerKarsten KellerMartin GeyerRalph Stephan Von BardelebenThomas MünzelAndres Beiras-fernandezEberhard SchulzEfthymios SotiriouTobias RufYang YangFelix KreidelTilman EmrichAlexander R Tammsubject
medicine.medical_specialtyCardiac CatheterizationMitral Valve Annuloplastycomputer.internet_protocol610 Medizin030204 cardiovascular system & hematology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMitral valve annuloplasty610 Medical sciencesMedicineFluoroscopyHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingIn patient030212 general & internal medicineECHO protocolProtocol (science)Heart Valve Prosthesis ImplantationMitral regurgitationmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMitral Valve InsufficiencyMultiplanar reconstructionTreatment OutcomeFeasibility StudiesTranscatheter mitral valve repairRadiologyCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinebusinesscomputerdescription
Objectives Several interventional approaches have been established for the treatment of severe mitral regurgitation (MR) in patients at elevated risk for surgery. Direct annuloplasty is a relatively novel option in transcatheter mitral valve repair dedicated to reverse pathology in specific subsets of MR. With regard to echocardiographic guidance, this procedure presents with higher efforts in comparison with edge-to-edge therapy to enable safe and exact positioning of the device's anchors; evidence on optimal peri-interventional imaging is sparse. We tested a specific 3D-echo-guidance protocol implementing single-beat multiplanar reconstruction (MPR) and evaluated its feasibility. Methods Overall, 16 patients consecutively treated with transcatheter direct annuloplasty for severe MR (87.5% functional/6.3% degenerative/6.3% mixed pathology) were entered in this monocentric analysis. Of these, two patients received a combined procedure including edge-to-edge repair. For all implantations, a 3D-echo-guidance protocol inheriting MPR was employed. Results Periprocedural device time decreased continuously (overall mean 140 ± 55.1 minutes, 213 ± 38 minutes in the first 4 vs 108 ± 33 minutes in the last 4 procedures, P = .018) using the MPR-based echo protocol, going along with reduced fluoroscopy times and doses. Technical success rate was high (93.8%) without any serious cardiac-related adverse events. MR could be relevantly improved. Conclusion Echocardiographic guidance of transcatheter direct annuloplasty using a real time MPR-based protocol is feasible and safe. Optimized imaging might enable reduced implantation times and potentially increases safety.
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2020-02-22 | Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.)REFERENCES |