Implantation of the ALLEGRA transcatheter valve using the IMPERIA delivery system resulted in 10.8% all-cause mortality and 5.9% bioprosthetic valve dysfunction at 1 year in native aortic stenosis.
Does the ALLEGRA transcatheter aortic valve implanted using the IMPERIA delivery system provide safe and effective outcomes at 1 year in patients with severe native aortic stenosis or degenerated surgical bioprosthesis?
The ALLEGRA transcatheter aortic valve using the IMPERIA delivery system demonstrated excellent 1-year safety and hemodynamic performance in patients with severe native aortic stenosis or degenerated surgical bioprostheses.
BACKGROUND: The EMPIRE I study assessed the early (30 days) safety and efficacy of a new fully repositionable delivery system (IMPERIA) for the commercially available ALLEGRA transcatheter aortic valve in patients with either severe native aortic stenosis or a degenerated surgical bioprosthesis. AIM: To report the final 1-year results of the EMPIRE I study. METHODS: EMPIRE I is a pre-market, prospective, multi-center, single-arm study conducted at 11 centers in 3 European countries. There were independent data safety and clinical events committees and an independent echocardiographic core laboratory. In this analysis, VARC-3 definitions of all clinical endpoints and echocardiographic parameters were employed. RESULTS: The study recruited 121 patients with severe native aortic stenosis and 16 with degenerated surgical bioprosthesis. At 1 year, the incidence of bioprosthetic valve dysfunction in the native population was 5.9%. No patients developed structural valve deterioration or endocarditis, and there were no patients with haemodynamic valve deterioration or bioprosthetic valve failure. In the valve-in-valve sub-group, 2/14 (14.3%) patients had moderate patient prosthesis mismatch at 30 days with no evidence of new bioprosthetic valve dysfunction at 1 year. In the native population, new permanent pacemaker implantation was 14.3% at 30 days and remained unchanged at 1 year. Cardiovascular mortality was 6.8% in the native population and 0% in the valve-in-valve patients. At 1-year, all-cause mortality was 10.8% (95% CI 6.4%-17.8%) in the native aortic stenosis population and 0% in the valve-in-valve patients. CONCLUSION: After 1 year of follow-up, the results of the EMPIRE 1 study show excellent haemodynamic performance, a low rate of bioprosthetic valve dysfunction, and no bioprosthetic valve failure in patients treated with the ALLEGRATM trans-catheter aortic valve implanted using the new IMPERIATM fully repositionable delivery system.
Baz et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Severe native aortic stenosis or degenerated surgical bioprosthesis (n=137). ALLEGRA transcatheter aortic valve using IMPERIA delivery system was evaluated on All-cause mortality in the native aortic stenosis population (95% CI 6.4-17.8). Implantation of the ALLEGRA transcatheter valve using the IMPERIA delivery system resulted in 10.8% all-cause mortality and 5.9% bioprosthetic valve dysfunction at 1 year in native aortic stenosis.