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Transjugular Transcatheter Tricuspid Valve Replacement

Lukas Stolz, Anson Cheung, Robert Boone, Neil Fam, Geraldine Ong, Pedro Villablanca, Ahmad Jabri, Ole De Backer, Jacob Eifer Mølller, Didier Tchétché, O. Oliva, Chak-Yu So, Yat‐Yin Lam, Azeem Latib, Andrea Scotti, Augustin Coisne, Arnaud Sudre, Julien Dreyfus, Mohammed Nejjari, Paul-Emile Favre, Ignacio Cruz‐González, Rodrigo Estévez-Loureiro, Manuel Barreiro‐Pérez, Raj Makkar, Dhairya Patel, Guillaume Leurent, Erwan Donal, Thomas Modine, Jörg Hausleiter

2024JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Data on procedural and early outcomes after transjugular transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement (TTVR) are limited. OBJECTIVES: This study sought to evaluate first-in-man procedural and clinical outcomes after transjugular TTVR with a special focus on patients who received large device sizes in whom TTVR outcomes have been questioned. METHODS: The retrospective registry included patients who underwent TTVR using the LuX-Valve Plus system (Jenscare Biotechnology Co Ltd) for symptomatic tricuspid regurgitation (TR) from January 2022 until February 2024 at 15 international centers in a compassionate use setting. The endpoints were procedural TR reduction, in-hospital death, adverse events, and 1-month survival. We further stratified results according to the size of the implanted device (<55 vs ≥55 mm). RESULTS: The registry included a total of 76 patients at a median age of 78 years (Q1-Q3: 72-83 years, 47.4% women). TR was reduced to ≤2+ and ≤1+ in 94.7% and 90.8% of patients (75.0% of patients received TTVR devices ≥55 mm) with well-sustained results at 1-month follow-up (TR ≤2+ in 95.0% and ≤1+ 86.8%). Residual TR was paravalvular in all cases. In-hospital death occurred in 4 patients (5.3%). Four patients (5.3%) underwent cardiac surgery during index hospitalization. Major in-hospital bleeding events occurred in 5 patients (6.6%). New in-hospital pacemaker implantation was required in 3.9% of patients in the overall cohort (5.7% in "pacemaker-naive" individuals). No cases of valve thrombosis, stroke, myocardial infarction, or pulmonary embolism were observed. At 1-month follow-up, survival was 94.4%, and NYHA functional class significantly improved. One further patient received a pacemaker, 1 further bleeding event occurred, and 2 patients underwent reintervention or surgery within the first 30 days after TTVR. No differences in procedural outcomes or adverse events were observed after stratification for valve size. CONCLUSIONS: Transjugular TTVR appears to be a safe and effective treatment option for patients with severe TR with comparable outcomes in very large tricuspid anatomies.

Topics & Concepts

Tricuspid valveValve replacementMedicineCardiologyStenosisCardiac Valve Diseases and TreatmentsCardiovascular Function and Risk FactorsPulmonary Hypertension Research and Treatments