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Transcatheter versus Surgical Aortic-Valve Replacement in High-Risk Patients
6.285
Zitationen
23
Autoren
2011
Jahr
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of transcatheter aortic-valve replacement has been shown to reduce mortality among high-risk patients with aortic stenosis who are not candidates for surgical replacement. However, the two procedures have not been compared in a randomized trial involving high-risk patients who are still candidates for surgical replacement. METHODS: At 25 centers, we randomly assigned 699 high-risk patients with severe aortic stenosis to undergo either transcatheter aortic-valve replacement with a balloon-expandable bovine pericardial valve (either a transfemoral or a transapical approach) or surgical replacement. The primary end point was death from any cause at 1 year. The primary hypothesis was that transcatheter replacement is not inferior to surgical replacement. RESULTS: The rates of death from any cause were 3.4% in the transcatheter group and 6.5% in the surgical group at 30 days (P=0.07) and 24.2% and 26.8%, respectively, at 1 year (P=0.44), a reduction of 2.6 percentage points in the transcatheter group (upper limit of the 95% confidence interval, 3.0 percentage points; predefined margin, 7.5 percentage points; P=0.001 for noninferiority). The rates of major stroke were 3.8% in the transcatheter group and 2.1% in the surgical group at 30 days (P=0.20) and 5.1% and 2.4%, respectively, at 1 year (P=0.07). At 30 days, major vascular complications were significantly more frequent with transcatheter replacement (11.0% vs. 3.2%, P<0.001); adverse events that were more frequent after surgical replacement included major bleeding (9.3% vs. 19.5%, P<0.001) and new-onset atrial fibrillation (8.6% vs. 16.0%, P=0.006). More patients undergoing transcatheter replacement had an improvement in symptoms at 30 days, but by 1 year, there was not a significant between-group difference. CONCLUSIONS: In high-risk patients with severe aortic stenosis, transcatheter and surgical procedures for aortic-valve replacement were associated with similar rates of survival at 1 year, although there were important differences in periprocedural risks. (Funded by Edwards Lifesciences; Clinical Trials.gov number, NCT00530894.).
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Autoren
- Craig R. Smith
- Martin B. Leon
- Michael J. Mack
- D. Craig Miller
- Jeffrey W. Moses
- Lars G. Svensson
- E. Murat Tuzcu
- John G. Webb
- Gregory P. Fontana
- Raj Makkar
- Mathew Williams
- Todd Dewey
- Samir Kapadia
- Vasilis Babaliaros
- Vinod H. Thourani
- Paul J. Corso
- Augusto D. Pichard
- Joseph E. Bavaria
- Howard C. Herrmann
- Jodi J. Akin
- William N. Anderson
- Duolao Wang
- Stuart Pocock
Institutionen
- Columbia University Irving Medical Center(US)
- New York Hospital Queens(US)
- NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital(US)
- Baylor Scott & White Health(US)
- Palo Alto University(US)
- Stanford University(US)
- Cleveland Clinic(US)
- St. Paul's Hospital(CA)
- University of British Columbia(CA)
- Cedars-Sinai Medical Center(US)
- Medical City Dallas Hospital(US)
- Emory University(US)
- MedStar Washington Hospital Center(US)
- Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania(US)
- Edwards Lifesciences (United States)(US)
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine(GB)