医学
二尖瓣反流
临床试验
临床终点
二尖瓣
心力衰竭
重症监护医学
心脏病学
内科学
作者
Gregg W. Stone,Alec Vahanian,David Adams,William T. Abraham,Jeffrey Borer,Jeroen J. Bax,Joachim Schöfer,Donald E. Cutlip,Mitchell W. Krucoff,Eugene H. Blackstone,Philippe Généreux,Michael J. Mack,Robert J. Siegel,Paul Grayburn,Maurice Enriquez‐Sarano,Patrizio Lancellotti,Gerasimos Filippatos,A. Pieter Kappetein
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jacc.2015.05.046
摘要
Mitral regurgitation (MR) is one of the most prevalent valve disorders and has numerous etiologies, including primary (organic) MR, due to underlying degenerative/structural mitral valve (MV) pathology, and secondary (functional) MR, which is principally caused by global or regional left ventricular remodeling and/or severe left atrial dilation. Diagnosis and optimal management of MR requires integration of valve disease and heart failure specialists, MV cardiac surgeons, interventional cardiologists with expertise in structural heart disease, and imaging experts. The introduction of transcatheter MV therapies has highlighted the need for a consensus approach to pragmatic clinical trial design and uniform endpoint definitions to evaluate outcomes in patients with MR. The Mitral Valve Academic Research Consortium is a collaboration between leading academic research organizations and physician-scientists specializing in MV disease from the United States and Europe. Three in-person meetings were held in Virginia and New York during which 44 heart failure, valve, and imaging experts, MV surgeons and interventional cardiologists, clinical trial specialists and statisticians, and representatives from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration considered all aspects of MV pathophysiology, prognosis, and therapies, culminating in a 2-part document describing consensus recommendations for clinical trial design (Part 1) and endpoint definitions (Part 2) to guide evaluation of transcatheter and surgical therapies for MR. The adoption of these recommendations will afford robustness and consistency in the comparative effectiveness evaluation of new devices and approaches to treat MR. These principles may be useful for regulatory assessment of new transcatheter MV devices, as well as for monitoring local and regional outcomes to guide quality improvement initiatives.
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