The PROGRESS trial is designed to randomize up to 750 patients with moderate aortic stenosis to early TAVR or clinical surveillance to evaluate death or heart failure events at 2 years.
RCT (n=750)
Open-label
1:1
Yes
Does early intervention with TAVR improve outcomes compared to clinical surveillance in patients with moderate aortic stenosis and at-risk features?
The PROGRESS trial is designed to determine whether early intervention with TAVR improves clinical outcomes compared to standard clinical surveillance in patients with moderate aortic stenosis and at-risk features.
For patients with moderate aortic stenosis (AS), current US guidelines recommend clinical surveillance every 1 to 2 years. However, moderate AS has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality in multiple observational studies, suggesting a possible role for earlier treatment with transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). To date, no large, randomized trial has examined whether an early intervention with TAVR will improve outcomes among these patients. The PROGRESS trial is a prospective, open-label, randomized, controlled, multicenter trial that includes up to 750 patients with moderate AS and at-risk features randomized 1:1 to either clinical surveillance or transfemoral TAVR with the SAPIEN 3/SAPIEN 3 Ultra/SAPIEN 3 Ultra RESILIA transcatheter heart valve (Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, CA). Patients are stratified by site, left ventricular ejection fraction, and peak jet velocity. The primary effectiveness endpoint is the composite of death or heart failure event with or without hospitalization at 2 years. The primary safety endpoint (evaluated in the TAVR arm only) is a composite of death, stroke, life threatening or fatal bleeding, acute kidney injury stage 4, hospitalization due to device- or procedure-related complications, or valve dysfunction requiring reintervention at 30 days. Patients will be followed annually through 10 years. The PROGRESS trial is the first large, randomized trial assessing the role of early intervention among patients with moderate AS with at-risk features compared to clinical surveillance. NCT04889872
Généreux et al. (Sun,) conducted a rct in Moderate aortic stenosis (n=750). Transfemoral TAVR vs. Clinical surveillance was evaluated on Composite of death or heart failure event with or without hospitalization at 2 years. The PROGRESS trial is designed to randomize up to 750 patients with moderate aortic stenosis to early TAVR or clinical surveillance to evaluate death or heart failure events at 2 years.