作者
Howard C. Herrmann,Roxana Mehran,Daniel J. Blackman,Stephen Bailey,Helge Möllmann,Mohamed Abdel‐Wahab,Walid Ben Ali,Paul Mahoney,Hendrik Ruge,David Wood,Sabine Bleiziffer,Basel Ramlawi,Hemal Gada,Anna Sonia Petronio,Charles D. Resor,William Merhi,Bruno García del Blanco,Guilherme F. Attizzani,Wayne Batchelor,Linda D. Gillam,Mayra Guerrero,Toby Rogers,Joshua Rovin,Molly Szerlip,Brian Whisenant,Dee Dee Wang,Kendra J. Grubb,Ratnasari Padang,Ming Fan,Andrew D. Althouse,Didier Tchétché
摘要
BackgroundPatients with severe aortic stenosis and a small aortic annulus are at risk for impaired valvular hemodynamic performance and associated adverse cardiovascular clinical outcomes after transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR).MethodsWe randomly assigned patients with symptomatic severe aortic stenosis and an aortic-valve annulus area of 430 mm2 or less in a 1:1 ratio to undergo TAVR with either a self-expanding supraannular valve or a balloon-expandable valve. The coprimary end points, each assessed through 12 months, were a composite of death, disabling stroke, or rehospitalization for heart failure (tested for noninferiority) and a composite end point measuring bioprosthetic-valve dysfunction (tested for superiority).ResultsA total of 716 patients were treated at 83 sites in 13 countries (mean age, 80 years; 87% women; mean Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality, 3.3%). The Kaplan–Meier estimate of the percentage of patients who died, had a disabling stroke, or were rehospitalized for heart failure through 12 months was 9.4% with the self-expanding valve and 10.6% with the balloon-expandable valve (difference, −1.2 percentage points; 90% confidence interval [CI], −4.9 to 2.5; P<0.001 for noninferiority). The Kaplan–Meier estimate of the percentage of patients with bioprosthetic-valve dysfunction through 12 months was 9.4% with the self-expanding valve and 41.6% with the balloon-expandable valve (difference, −32.2 percentage points; 95% CI, −38.7 to −25.6; P<0.001 for superiority). The aortic-valve mean gradient at 12 months was 7.7 mm Hg with the self-expanding valve and 15.7 mm Hg with the balloon-expandable valve, and the corresponding values for additional secondary end points through 12 months were as follows: mean effective orifice area, 1.99 cm2 and 1.50 cm2; percentage of patients with hemodynamic structural valve dysfunction, 3.5% and 32.8%; and percentage of women with bioprosthetic-valve dysfunction, 10.2% and 43.3% (all P<0.001). Moderate or severe prosthesis–patient mismatch at 30 days was found in 11.2% of the patients in the self-expanding valve group and 35.3% of those in the balloon-expandable valve group (P<0.001). Major safety end points appeared to be similar in the two groups.ConclusionsAmong patients with severe aortic stenosis and a small aortic annulus who underwent TAVR, a self-expanding supraannular valve was noninferior to a balloon-expandable valve with respect to clinical outcomes and was superior with respect to bioprosthetic-valve dysfunction through 12 months. (Funded by Medtronic; SMART ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04722250.)