View clinical trials related to Mitral Regurgitation.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and performance of Transcatheter Mitral Valve Replacement (TMVR) system for the treatment of severe, symptomatic mitral regurgitation (MR).
Mitral valve disease is a common pathologic problem occurring in approximately 2% of the general population but climbing to 10% in those over the age of 75 in Canada[1]. This project has three primary goals all of which will positively affect cardiac patient care. 1) Create patient specific MV models for complex repairs that will allow surgeons the opportunity to practice the repair. 2) Potentially predict the outcomes following minimally invasive repair techniques such as transcatheter treatments (e.g., MitraClip). 3) Provide a model to train individuals on mitral valve repair techniques.
To demonstrate reduction of MR with durable performance and im-provements in functional status
The PREMISE Registry is a retrospective, observational study that will evaluate the efficacy and safety of the MitraClip in real-world Canadian practice. It will include all patients who have undergone MitraClip implantation in Canada to date.
The ChordArt System is a novel catheter based technology for mitral chordal replacement that enables controlled implantation of artificial mitral chords to treat mitral regurgitation with a minimally invasive approach. The implant is designed to allow transfemoral antegrade implantation.
This study is a prospective, single-arm, multi-center feasibility clinical study of the Tendyne Mitral Valve System for the treatment of eligible subjects with symptomatic, severe mitral regurgitation and severe mitral annular calcification (MAC). Subjects satisfying the study inclusion/exclusion criteria will undergo a procedure to implant the Tendyne mitral valve replacement device.
The current state of the art management of severe mitral regurgitation is surgical mitral valve repair, either with open chest surgery or mini-thoracotomy. However, standard surgical approaches requiring cardiopulmonary bypass are suitable for patients with low or moderate surgical risk, thus many patients are denied surgery because of unfavorable risk-benefit balance. The EuroHeart Surveyconducted by the ESC showed that one half of patients with severe mitral regurgitation were denied surgical treatment because they were felt to be at too high risk for surgery by the referring physician. Such patients are usually elderly and have co-morbidities. Thus, there is a need for novel devices enabling interventional cardiologists and cardiothoracic surgeons to perform mitral repair in a minimally-invasive fashion and possibly without cardiopulmonary bypass. The landmark EVEREST II trial randomized 279 patients with grade 3/4 MR in a 2:1 fashion to MitraClip® or surgical repair/replacement showing a lower major adverse event rate at 30-days in the MitraClip® group (15.0% vs. 48%; superiority p<0.001), mainly driven by the need for blood transfusion with surgery, and the primary efficacy endpoint of freedom from the combined outcome of death, new surgery for mitral valve dysfunction or the occurrence of >2+ MR was achieved in 55% vs. 73% (non-inferiority p=0.007). However, this study has included a highly selected patient cohort in which patients with significant surgical risk have been excluded. More recently, Multinational (ACCESS-EU, EVEREST-High Risk) and national registries (TRAMI, SWISS) have shown safety and efficacy in the real world experience. Patients currently treated are high risk, elderly, with comorbidities and mainly affected by FMR. There is need for an Italian registry, since Italy has produced the second largest volume of transcathetermitral procedures in the world after Germany. The present registry is designed to collect real world clinical data on early and long-term outcomes following percutaneous mitral regurgitation therapy in consecutive patients undergoing transcatheter procedures in Hospitals linked to the GISE database.
Prospective, observational, multi-center trial in which patients with mitral regurgitation sufficient to merit mitral valve repair will receive a surgical transvalvular, intra-annular Mitral Bridgeâ„¢ to reduce or eliminate mitral regurgitation.
The MitraClip EXPAND Study (A Contemporary, Prospective Study Evaluating Real-world Experience of Performance and Safety for the Next Generation of MitraClip Devices) is designed to confirm the safety and performance of the MitraClip NTR System and MitraClip XTR System.
The purpose of the MitraClip post-marketing clinical use surveillance study is to observe the frequency, type and degree of adverse device effects and adverse events in order to assure the safety of the new medical device, and to collect safety and efficacy information for evaluating the results of the clinical use.