Failure of acute procedural success after MitraClip implantation independently predicted all-cause mortality (HR 2.13, p=0.02) and heart failure rehospitalisation (HR 2.31, p=0.01).
Cohort (n=150)
Does failure of acute procedural success predict midterm mortality and heart failure rehospitalisation in high-risk patients undergoing percutaneous mitral valve repair with MitraClip?
Failure to achieve acute procedural success during MitraClip implantation significantly increases the risk of midterm mortality and heart failure rehospitalization.
Effect estimate: HR 2.13
p-value: p=0.02
AIMS: MitraClip implantation is evolving as a potential alternative treatment to conventional surgery in high-risk patients with significant mitral regurgitation (MR). However, outcome predictors are under-investigated. The aim of this study was to identify predictors of midterm mortality and heart failure rehospitalisation after percutaneous mitral valve repair with MitraClip. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 150 consecutive patients were followed for a median of 463 days. Survival analyses were performed for baseline characteristics, risk scores and failure of acute procedural success (APS) defined as persisting MR grade 3+ or 4+. Univariate significant risk stratifiers were tested in multivariate analyses using a Cox proportional hazards model. Overall survival was 96% at 30 days, 79.5% at 12 months, and 62% at two years. Multivariate analysis identified APS failure (HR 2.13, p=0.02), NYHA Class IV at baseline (HR 2.11, p=0.01) and STS score ≥12 (HR 2.20, p<0.0001) as significant independent predictors of all-cause mortality, and APS failure (HR 2.31, p=0.01) and NYHA Class IV at baseline (HR 1.89, p=0.03) as significant independent predictors of heart failure rehospitalisation. Furthermore, a post-procedural significant decrease in hospitalisation rate could only be observed after successful interventions (0.89±1.07 per year before vs. 0.54±0.96 after implantation, p=0.01). Patients with severely dilated and overloaded ventricles who did not meet EVEREST II eligibility criteria were at higher risk of APS failure. CONCLUSIONS: The failure of acute procedural success proved to have the most important impact on outcome after MitraClip implantation.
Puls et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in significant mitral regurgitation (n=150). MitraClip implantation vs. Successful acute procedural success was evaluated on all-cause mortality (HR 2.13, p=0.02). Failure of acute procedural success after MitraClip implantation independently predicted all-cause mortality (HR 2.13, p=0.02) and heart failure rehospitalisation (HR 2.31, p=0.01).
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