6533b827fe1ef96bd128656c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Early symptomatic benefit indicates long-term prognosis after transcatheter mitral valve edge-to-edge repair in functional and degenerative etiology

Tobias RufMichaela M. HellRalph Stephan Von BardelebenKatharina SchnitzlerThomas MünzelSonja BornAlexander R TammOmar HahadMartin GeyerKarsten KellerKarsten KellerJaqueline G. Da Rocha E SilvaAniela PetrescuFelix KreidelVolker SchmittKevin BachmannEberhard Schulz

subject

Heart Valve Prosthesis ImplantationMaleMitral valve repairmedicine.medical_specialtyMitral regurgitationEjection fractionbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentMitraClipPrognosismedicine.diseaseSymptomatic reliefSurgeryTreatment Outcomemedicine.anatomical_structureInterquartile rangeHeart failureMitral valvemedicineHumansMitral ValveFemaleCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessRetrospective Studies

description

Mitral regurgitation (MR) is common in patients with heart failure and constitutes an independent risk factor for adverse prognosis besides NYHA-class. The predictive value of dyspnea reduction after transcatheter mitral valve repair (TMVr) on outcome has not been investigated up to now.We enrolled 627 consecutive patients (47.0% female, 57.4% functional MR; median follow-up 486 days[IQR 157/961]; survival status available in 96.8%; symptoms assessed in n = 556 at baseline / n = 406 at 1 month) treated with isolated percutaneous mitral valve edge-to-edge repair in our center from 06/2010-03/2018 (exclusion of combined forms of TMVr) in a monocentric retrospective analysis. Survival was 97.6% at discharge, 73.9% after 1, 54.5% after 3, 37.6% after 5 and 21.7% after 7-years. Before TMVr, NYHA-classes III/IV were found in 89.0%. Of these, 74.7% reported symptomatic relief (reduction in NYHA-class) one month after procedure (NYHA class recorded in 406 patients at 30 days). NYHA-classes III/IV were documented in 37.2% (p  0.001) at 30 days and in 36.6% (p  0.001) at 1 year without significant changes between the follow-ups. Dyspnea reduction was accompanied by significantly improved long-term survival (1 year, 89.1 vs 71.2%, p = 0.001, 2 years: 75.5 vs 58.7%, p = 0.039) and was identified as an independent predictor for lower mortality (1-year HR for increased mortality by missing symptomatic improvement 2.94 [95%CI 1.53-5.65], p = 0.001; long-term HR 1.95 [95%CI 1.29-2.94], p = 0.001) independently in both etiologies of MR.TMVr by edge-to-edge therapy enables early and sustainable symptomatic improvement in nearly 75% of the symptomatic patients. The simple assessment of postinterventional changes in NYHA-class might serve as an independent predictor for mid- and long-term prognosis in both FMR and DMR.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2021.09.038