Severe Aortic Stenosis and Tavr
Severe Aortic Stenosis and Tavr
Severe Aortic Stenosis and Tavr
TAVR
Disclosures
3
Aortic Stenosis Demographics
Aortic stenosis 2% US population >65yrs old
Less Common
5
3 Major Etiologies for aortic stenosis
Major Risk Factors
Independent clinical factors associated
with degenerative aortic valve disease
include the following:4
Increasing age
Male gender
Hypertension
Smoking
Elevated lipoprotein A
9
Signs and Symptoms
Heart Failure Carotid Parvus et Tardus
Syncope Soft A2
Crescendo-Decrescendo
systolic murmur
Timing of peak murmur and
NOT intensity predicts
severity
Aortic Stenosis Is Life Threatening
and Progresses Rapidly
23
Survival, %
20
15
10 12
5
4 3
0
Breast Lung Colorectal Prostate Ovarian Severe
Cancer Cancer Cancer Cancer Cancer Inoperable AS*
*Using constant hazard ratio. Data on file, Edwards Lifesciences LLC. Analysis courtesy of Murat Tuczu, MD, Cleveland Clinic
5 year survival of breast cancer, lung cancer, prostate cancer, ovarian cancer and severe inoperable aortic
stenosis
12
Echocardiographic Guidelines are the Gold Standard
in Assessing Severe Aortic Stenosis6
*
*Doppler-Echocardiographic measurements
According to the 2014 ACC/AHA guidelines, severe aortic stenosis is defined as:
Aortic valve area (AVA) less than 1.0 cm2
Mean gradient greater than 40 mmHg or jet velocity greater than 4.0 m/s
13
Multiple Modalities May Be Used to
6
Diagnose Severe Aortic Stenosis
Trans-thoracic
Auscultation Echo (TTE)
Cardiac Chest
Cath. X-ray
Electro-
cardiogram
14
Echocardiography:
Continuity Equation-Conservation of Mass
Echocardiography:
3D Planimetry
Not so classic aortic stenosis
1. Low Flow, Low Gradient
Severe AS
23
Stages of Valvular AS.
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Years
Study data demonstrate that early and late outcomes were similarly good in both
symptomatic and asymptomatic patients
Transfemoral Approach
27
Prosthetic Heart Valves
Tilting Disc Valve
Bio-prosthetic Valve
Low Percentage of Aortic Valve Surgery
Studies show at least 40% of patients with severe AS are not treated with an AVR9-15
31
Summary of Recommendations for AS: Choice of Surgical or Transcatheter Intervention.
33
Two TAVR Options
Edwards Sapien Valve Medtronic CoreValve
Stainless Steel Frame Nitinol Frame-self expanding
More Aortic Regurg, less AV Less Aortic Regurg, More heart
block/PPM block/PPM
Better for severe bulky calcification.
35
TAVR Multimodality imaging
PARTNER Study Design
Symptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis
ASSESSMENT: High-Risk AVR Candidate
Cohort A 3,105 Total Patients Screened Cohort B
Total = 1,057 patients
N = 699 High Risk 2 Parallel Trials: Inoperable N = 358
Individually Powered
ASSESSMENT: ASSESSMENT:
Yes Transfemoral No Transfemoral
Access Access
Secondary E nd-Points :
the rate of death from cardiovas cular caus es
41
Standard Medical Therapy
179 Patients assigned
179 Patients
Stroke was defined as follows: Neurological deficit lasting 24 hours or lasting less than 24 hours with a brain imaging study showing an infarction.
Major vascular complications were defined as any thoracic aortic dissection, access site or access-related vascular injury (dissection, stenosis, perforation, rupture,
arterio-venous fistula, pseudoaneurysm, or hematoma) leading to either death, need for significant blood transfusion (> 3 units), or percutaneous or surgical
intervention, and/or distal embolization (non-cerebral) from a vascular source requiring surgery or resulting in amputation or irreversible end-organ damage.
HR [95% CI] =
0.93 [0.74, 1.15]
p (log rank) = 0.483
44.8%
34.6% 44.2%
26.8% 33.7%
24.3%
No. at Risk
TAVR 348 298 261 239 222 187 149
HR [95% CI] =
1.09 [0.62, 1.91]
p (log rank) = 0.763
Yes No Versus
CoreValve
CoreValve
Non- CoreValve SAVR
Iliofemoral
Iliofemoral
N=487 N=147
5
TCT 2013 LBCT Extreme Risk Study | Iliofemoral Pivotal 1
Study Purpose
Study Purpose: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of the
CoreValve THV for the treatment of patients with symptomatic
severe aortic stenosis in whom the predicted risk of operative
mortality or serious, irreversible morbidity was 50% or greater
at 30 days
5
TCT 2013 LBCT Extreme Risk Study | Iliofemoral Pivotal 2
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Severe aortic stenosis: AVA 0.8 cm2 or AVAI 0.5 cm2/m2 AND
mean gradient > 40 mm Hg or peak velocity > 4 m/sec at rest or
with dobutamine stress (if LVEF < 50%)
NYHA functional class II or greater
5
TCT 2013 LBCT Extreme Risk Study | Iliofemoral Pivotal 3
Primary Endpoint
All Cause Mortality or Major Stroke
All Cause Mortality or Major Stroke
P < 0.0001
Performance Goal = 43%
9.3%
[6.7,12.0] 25.5%
[21.6,29.4]
Months Post-Procedure
57
Study Disposition
Primary Endpoint: 1 Year All-cause Mortality ACC 2014
Surgical
Transcatheter
19.1%
14.2%
3.3%
59
2-Year All-cause Mortality ACC 2014
Major Stroke
62
Other Endpoints
Events* 1 Month 1 Year
TAV
R SAVR P Value TAVR SAVR P Value
Vascular complications
(major), % 5.9 1.7 0.003 6.2 2.0 0.004
1 2 3 4 5
Confirm the patient is Confirm the patient Evaluate the Evaluate the Evaluate the peripheral
diagnosed with severe has been aortic valvular peripheral vasculature and aortic
symptomatic native independently complex using vasculature and aortic valvular complex using
aortic stenosis evaluated by two echocardiography valvular complex catheterization
cardiac surgeons and using MDCT
meets the indication
for TAVR
Note: Evaluation using CT is typically not done unless the Heart Team confirms that patient is a candidate for TAVR
65
Key Takeaways
Aortic Stenosis is prevalent with a high morbidity and
mortality when symptomatic and aortic valve replacement is
the only treatment associated with improved outcomes.