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Part 3 | Session 12 ACC 22: ADAPT-TAVR Shows SLT Does Not Affect CO for Patients After TAVR
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Part 3 | Session 13 ACC 22: Results From the Chocolate-Touch Study
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Part 3 | Session 14 ACC 22: Results from the GIPS-IV Trial
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Part 3 | Session 18 ACC 22: 3-year Efficacy Outcomes from the SPYRAL HTN-ON MED Med Pilot Study
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Part 3 | Session 19 2022 AHA/ACC/HFSA Guideline for HF Management: Highlights & Implementation
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Part 4 | Session 1 ACC 22: 3 Trials That Will Change Your Practice with Dr Purvi Parwani
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Part 4 | Session 3 4 Lipid Late-breaker Highlights from ACC.22 with Dr Erin Michos
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Part 1 | Session 1 ACC 22 Late-breaking Science Preview
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Part 1 | Session 2 ACC.22 Late-breaking Science Wrap-Up
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Part 2 | Session 1 ACC 2022 Late-breaker Discussion: The SODIUM-HF Trial
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Part 2 | Session 2 ACC 2022 Late-breaker Discussion: The SuperWIN Trial
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Part 2 | Session 3 ACC 22 Late-breaker Discussion: The PROMPT-HF Trial
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Part 2 | Session 4 ACC 22 Late-breaker Discussion: The DIAMOND Trial
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Part 3 | Session 1 ACC 22: Findings from the VALOR-HCM Trial
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Part 3 | Session 3 ACC 22: Results From the PACIFIC AF Trial
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Part 3 | Session 5 ACC 22: Results from the TRANSLATE-TIMI 70 Trial
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Part 3 | Session 6 ACC 22: Results from the POISE-3 Trial
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Part 3 | Session 7 ACC 22: ICD Shock Therapies and the Burden of Ventricular Tachycardia
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Part 3 | Session 9 ACC 22: Magnitude & Duration of Effects of a siRNA Targeting Lp(a)
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Part 3 | Session 10 ACC 22: Results From a sub-study of the POISE-3 Trial
Our regular review series View from the Thoraxcenter hosted by Prof Nicolas Van Mieghem and Dr Joost Daemen (Thoraxcentre, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, NL) provide a concise analysis of the late-breaking science results and spotlight impactful data.
For a deeper dive into key clinical trial data, Dr Harriette Van Spall (McMaster University, Hamilton, CA)talks with principal investigators in her regular Late-Breaker Discussion Series.
Short, accessible Expert Interviews were conducted with select faculty focusing on the results, applicability, and impact on future research.
More from this programme
Faculty Biographies
Michael J Reardon
Dr Michael J. Reardon holds the position of Clinical Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery at MD Anderson Cancer Center and created the multi-institution, multidisciplinary cardiac tumor team with HMH and MDA.
He has served as elected president of the medical staff for the HMH and received numerous awards including the Overstreet Award and Noon Award. He currently holds the Allison Family Distinguished Chair of Cardiovascular Research and divides his time between building innovative clinical, research and educational programs.
Transcript
Rationale of the Study
As we all know, TAVR's become an established treatment of a, a severe aortic stenosis, and because of a family of randomised trials we've run, it's now been approved at all risk levels. In fact, risk is no longer part of our guidelines. Therefore we're seeing younger and healthier patients in our clinics being considered for TAVR. Therefore, it's very important for us in advising these patients, to know between TAVR and surgical valve, what's the rate of structural valve deterioration, and if you get structural valve deterioration, what are the clinical outcomes of that? This study answers those questions.
Study Design and Patient Cohort
The study design, is we took the CoreValve High-risk, and SURTAVI randomised cohorts, which is over 2000 patients. We used a randomised cohort to compare the difference in structural valve deterioration between surgical biologic valves, and TAVR using a CoreValve or an Evolut. We then added the non-randomized continued access arm to get to almost 5,000 patients, and use this larger number to look at the outcomes and the predictors of structural valve deterioration.
Key Findings
The most interesting findings, are that that surgery has more structural valve deterioration than TAVI. It's something that most of us would not have initially predicted, and that this is accentuated in people that have a small annulus, less than 23 millimetres by CT scan, such as women or smaller, smaller people. We also found that if you did develop structural valve deterioration, whether you've had a surgical valve or TAVR, it basically doubled your risk of death, and doubled your risk of hospitalisation. We also found that people that tended to get structural valve deterioration, with those with a larger body surface area, women, younger patients, and patients that are healthier.
Influence on Clinical Practice
These results will influence clinical practise in a number of ways. My patients come in everyday, that are often candidates for both surgery and for TAVI. And they want to know, basically what they should have. And one question is, is how likely is the value you put in me, to develop dysfunction at some point? And if it does develop dysfunction, how is this dysfunction going to affect my health and wellbeing? This study helps answer those questions, and helps us make good decisions for our patients when they come to see us.
Next Steps
Well, the next steps are that this is a five year study. The SURTAVI, the intermediate risk trial, and the Evolut low risk trial will both be followed over 10 years. And we'll gather this data at 10 years, and this longer term follow up will further inform the field, our patients and practitioners, how best to make these decisions.
Take-home Messages
The take home message is, if you have, if you're at a high or intermediate risk for surgical aortic valve replacement, and you get surgery or TAVI using a quarter of Evolut super annulus self expanding valve, your TAVI valve will have less structural valve deterioration than any of the surgical valves used in the trial. If you get structural valve deterioration, whether you have a TAVI or surgery, it doubles your risk of mortality, it doubles a risk of hospitalisation. We also see that is, this is accentuated in smaller annuluses. So people like women, do much better.