Heart Diseases Clinical Trial
To establish a registry in order to collect and analyze baseline and outcome data on patients with severe valvular stenosis treated with balloon valvuloplasty.
BACKGROUND:
Valvular stenosis or incompetence results in an estimated 41,000 valve replacements in the
United States each year. These replacements are equally distributed between the aortic and
mitral valves. An estimated 60 percent of aortic valve replacements are the result of valve
stenosis; 20-30 percent of mitral valve replacements are due to stenosis. The risk of
operative mortality in single valve replacement ranges from 3 percent to as high as 15
percent depending upon patient characteristics. Morbidity associated with open heart
procedures includes wound infection, reoperation for bleeding, and post-operative pain. Most
patients with artificial valves require anticoagulant therapy for the rest of their lives
and thus face the competing risks of hemorrhage and valve thrombosis/embolism. In addition,
there are a number of patients with aortic stenosis who are not candidates for aortic valve
replacement because of unacceptable operative risks who might be dramatically improved by
balloon valvuloplasty.
The pathophysiologic processes underlying valvular stenosis at the aortic and mitral
positions are quite different. Mitral stenosis is an outcome of rheumatic fever. Rheumatic
fever is quite unusual in this country but it and its sequelae, rheumatic valvular disease,
persist as major public health problems in the Third World. Aortic stenosis is most commonly
the result of calcific degeneration of a normal tricuspid aortic valve in the elderly or the
result of rheumatic fever but can also develop in a congenital bicuspid aortic valve which
becomes progressively more stenotic with age and the wear of abnormal flow patterns.
The results of surgical valvuloplasty differ for mitral and aortic valves. Surgical
valvuloplasty (commissurotomy) for mitral stenosis is currently a well-established and
commonly used treatment for symptomatic patients with mitral stenosis. Similar attempts at
repair of aortic stenosis have been largely unsuccessful. Surgical valvuloplasty for aortic
stenosis has, for this reason, been abandoned in favor of valve replacement. Initial
attempts at aortic balloon valvuloplasty were, therefore, undertaken in patients who were
not surgical candidates; these initial efforts in a small number of patients, coming as they
did in the wake of abandoned surgical attempts, were surprisingly successful in reducing
gradients and increasing valve area without complications such as embolism or significant
regurgitation.
Balloon valvuloplasty began with pediatric cardiologists using catheters designed for
dilatation of peripheral arterial stenosis in children with pulmonic stenosis and those with
coarctation of the aorta. Balloon dilatation has been quite successful with pulmonic
stenosis, and is now an accepted therapeutic maneuver. It is less successful with
coarctation of the aorta. As a direct outgrowth of this research, investigators have applied
this procedure to mitral and aortic stenosis in adults.
Balloon valvuloplasty is performed in the cardiac catheterization laboratory without general
anesthesia. A balloon catheter is inserted percutaneously in the venous side of the
circulation and is placed across the mitral valve after puncture of the atrial septum.
Inflation of appropriately sized balloons has resulted in marked reduction of transvalvular
gradients and increase in calculated valve area in most of the cases thus far reported.
Given the success of closed commissurotomy, these are not surprising findings.
A similar procedure has been used in severely stenotic aortic valves by either advancing the
balloon through the mitral valve into the aortic position or approaching the valve
retrograde. Aortic balloon valvuloplasty has thus far been employed largely in severely ill,
elderly patients who are judged not able to tolerate valve replacement. As noted above,
results have been quite promising; low mortality and morbidity, substantial hemodynamic
improvement and short hospital stays have been observed. These anecdotal reports have led to
the application of balloon valvuloplasty in increasing numbers of patients. Major issues
needed to be addressed prior to general acceptance of this therapy for both aortic and
mitral stenosis and for operative and nonoperative candidates. The issues include:
definition of risk of mortality and morbidity overall and in subgroups defined by baseline
characteristics; success rate defined clinically and hemodynamically overall and in
subgroups; the durability of this procedure, that is, how long will a given improvement in
clinical and hemodynamic measures persist; definition of subgroups with particularly
favorable or unfavorable outcomes. These questions were addressed by the NHLBI Balloon
Valvuloplasty Registry.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Investigators treating patients with balloon valvuloplasty voluntarily collected and
submitted data on consecutive cases of valvuloplasty for two years of active recruitment and
followed patients at selected intervals for a minimum of two and a half years. Demographic,
clinical, and hemodynamic data were collected on each patient during the valvuloplasty
hospitalization. The data were submitted from the participating clinical units to the
Coordinating Center.
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