View clinical trials related to Aortic Valve Stenosis.
Filter by:The DETECT AS Trial is a randomized clinical trial and quality improvement initiative that seeks to investigate the impact of electronic provider notification of severe aortic stenosis (AS) on its management, on the utilization of aortic valve replacement (AVR), and on ethnic and racial disparities in AVR utilization. After the investigators identify patients in whom echocardiography shows severe aortic stenosis, defined by an aortic valve area (AVA) <1.0cm2, the ordering provider of the echocardiogram will then be randomly assigned to either the intervention group or to the control group. Providers randomly assigned to the intervention group will be sent an electronic (email or message via the electronic health record) physician notification for every one of their patients with severe aortic stenosis on TTE. Electronic notification will also highlight relevant ACC/AHA Clinical Practice Guideline recommendations regarding the management of severe AS. No intervention will be performed for patients belonging to physicians assigned to the control group. The primary endpoint will be AVR utilization, defined as the proportion of patients with a clinical indication for severe AS that undergo AVR. Clinical indications will be based upon the 2020 AHA/ACC Clinical Practice Guidelines for Valvular Heart Disease. Secondary end-points will be mortality, heart failure hospitalization, TTE utilization/surveillance, AS billing code diagnosis, and cardiology/Heart Valve Team referral. Pre-defined subgroup analyses will be performed to assess AVR utilization among women, racial/ethnic minority groups, low-gradient AS, cardiologist and non-cardiologist ordering provider, and inpatient and outpatient practice settings.
To evaluate feasibility and safety of the ACURATE Prime™ XL Transfemoral Aortic Valve System for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) in subjects with severe native aortic stenosis who are indicated for TAVI.
In this study the investigators will assess a variety of novel markers of heart strength (contractility) and assess whether they can give a clearer indication of how well patients with weak hearts respond to the TAVI procedure. The investigators will perform a stress echocardiogram prior to each TAVI procedure and measure the global longitudinal strain (GLS) in the left ventricle (LV) heart muscle, a detailed marker of muscle strength. The investigators will then proceed to the TAVI procedure and measure the contractility of the main pumping chamber in the heart before and after giving a very low dose of an adrenaline -like drug (dobutamine). The patient will already have received this short acting drug (at the same and higher doses) during their routine care planning stress echocardiogram.
In this study, the investigators evaluate whether routine double inflation of the valve could have a lasting impact. The investigators hypothesize that a routine second reinflation of the balloon, or "double tap", will improve flow across the valve when compared to a single inflation. The investigators hypothesize that "double tap" (1) will decrease mean gradient between first and second inflation during the procedure, (2) will decrease mean gradient on immediate post procedure and 30 day postprocedure echocardiograms when compared to mean gradient gradient after single inflation. Less obstruction indicated by lower mean gradient early after deployment may translate to improved 5 and 10 year outcomes. Furthermore, the investigators hypothesize that this small change in technique will have no effect on procedure time or complications and the change will not result in any increase in perioperative vascular complications, or new permanent pacemaker insertion. The primary objective of this study is to determine if double valve inflation during a TAVR procedure improves valve area and mean gradients as measured by echocardiogram immediately following the procedure and at 30 days follow up.
A prospective, non-randomized, single-arm, single-center, first-in-human study designed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of the DurAVR™ THV System in the treatment of subjects with symptomatic severe aortic stenosis.
Aortic stenosis is narrowing of the aortic valve, and is the commonest type of valve disease requiring surgery. Current guidelines recommend waiting till patients develop symptoms (chest pain, breathlessness and dizzy spells/fainting) before possible open heart surgery to replace the valve is offered. However, studies using detailed 'MRI' scanning of the heart have shown that up to half of the patients already have 'scarring' in the heart by the time symptoms develop. Furthermore, scarring is not fully reversed even after surgery and is associated with worse outcome. This suggests that some patients are being offered treatment too late. Two randomised trials in the UK (EASY AS and EVOLVED) are currently investigating if valve replacement before symptoms will result in better survival. The aim of this study is to compare the effect of early valve replacement versus waiting for symptoms, on the amount of scarring in the heart. The investigators want to know if early treatment leads to less overall scarring at the end, and leads to better quality of life and recovery after surgery. The investigators will invite participants of the EASY AS and EVOLVED trials to have 1-2 MRI heart scans: at recruitment and 3 years after being randomly allocated to early aortic valve replacement vs 'watchful waiting'. The investigators will also assess the impact of the two treatment approaches on quality of life, disability-free survival (using questionnaires) and recovery after surgery. The results from this project will increase understanding of the results of the main trials, and lead to improved selection of patients with aortic stenosis who are likely to benefit from early surgery.
The objective of this study is to establish the safety and effectiveness of the Edwards SAPIEN X4 Transcatheter Heart Valve (THV) in subjects who are at high or greater risk with a failing aortic bioprosthetic valve.
The objective of this study is to establish the safety and effectiveness of the Edwards SAPIEN X4 Transcatheter Heart Valve (THV) in subjects with symptomatic, severe, calcific aortic stenosis (AS).
The objective of this clinical trial is to collect data on procedural safety and device performance of the Portico and Navitor devices and FlexNav delivery system to treat patients with severe aortic stenosis in the Indian population.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the long term safety and effectiveness of the SAPIEN 3 Transcatheter Heart Valve system in real world setting.