Severe and Symptomatic Aortic Stenosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Vascular Complications and Bleeding After Transfemoral TAVI: a Comparison Between Surgical and Percutaneous Approaches
Since the first implantation by Cribier, transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI)
revolutionized the management of severe symptomatic aortic stenosis. Indeed, TAVI is
indicated as an alternative to conventional surgery in patients at high surgical risk or
contra-indicated to conventional surgery.
However, TAVI remains associated with specific complications related to the technics itself
dominated by vascular complications and conductive disorders. Major vascular complications
remain frequent after TAVI despite improvements in operators' experience, patient's selection
and lower profile devices. Indeed, according to the Valve Academic Research Consortium 2
(VARC-2) criteria , major VC are still reported with an incidence of 1.5% to 15% of the
procedures in registries and may be associated with unfavorable clinical outcomes. Currently,
percutaneous approach (PC) in transfemoral TAVI is performed in routine, considered as a less
invasive strategy than the traditional surgical cutdown (SC) performed in the first TAVI
experience. Indeed, percutaneous approach may facilitate the local anesthesia and does not
require the presence of the surgeon in the catheterization laboratory . However, surgical
approach is still performed in many centers, allowing a better control of the puncture site
with a low rate of vascular complications . Several non-randomized studies compared the two
approaches with contradictory results]. No data are available comparing both approaches
performed by the same team during the same period.
The aim of this study was to compare percutaneous and surgical approaches in terms of
vascular complications and bleeding in patients undergoing transfemoral TAVI.
This prospective monocentric observational study aims to include all patients undergoing TAVI
via transfemoral access from November 2017 at Montpellier University Hospital, France.
All procedures are performed in the same site by 7 medical teams including 4 different
surgeons and 9 interventional cardiologists.
All patients have severe symptomatic aortic stenosis secondary to degenerative disease
confirmed by transthoracic echocardiography (mean gradient >40 mmHg and/or valve area <1 cm2)
and are deemed for TAVI after heart team decision.
Before the procedure, a multislice computerized tomography (MSCT) is systematically performed
to evaluate the aortic annulus, the aorta and to determine the access site.
The choice of percutaneous or surgical is at operators' discretion, according to predictable
access site difficulties (calcifications, tortuosity femoral bifurcation height) and global
considerations as obesity.
Both procedures are performed during the same period, our center using both techniques in a
common way.
TAVI procedure are performed under general anesthesia in the majority of cases.
Percutaneous approach The anterior wall of the common femoral artery are punctured under
echographic guidance after selection of a site free of calcifications and above the femoral
bifurcation and a 6-French sheath was inserted.
Two Perclose ProGlide® devices (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, CA) are used to perform the
perpendicular preclosing. After the deployment of the prosthesis, the TAVI sheath is removed
and the nodes from the two previously placed ProGlide® devices were tightened. Final femoral
angiographic control is not systematic.
Surgical approach A surgical equivalent of the " preclose technique ", untitled the " zip
technique " is performed routinely in our center. This technique avoids arterial
crossclamping and purse string effect. Briefly, the femoral artery is exposed through a
transversal groin incision, the anterior wall of the artery is cleaned from surrounding
tissues up to a few centi- meters. The most suitable site is chosen free of calcifications
allowing a puncture and insertion of a 6-French sheath. At the end of the procedure, both
ends of the sutures are gently pulled to obtain coaptation of the arterial wall.
Study endpoints The primary endpoint of our study is a composite of vascular complications
and bleeding defined by the modified VARC-2 classification.
Secondary end points included complications after TAVI, amount of contrast, amount of
radiation, procedure duration, hospitalization length.
Data assessment Data on patients' baseline characteristics, procedural details and
in-hospital outcomes is collected from a prospective TAVI database.
No additional testing or biological samples were specifically required for this study.
;
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed |
NCT02797158 -
Post TAVI Coronary REVASCularisation Guided by Myocardial Perfusion Imaging: a Prospective Open Label Pilot Study: The REVASC-TAVI Study
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03402724 -
Long-term Clinical and Echographic Follow-up (More Than 4 Years) After TAVI.
|