Baseline NT-proBNP was independently associated with a 62% increased risk of 2-year all-cause mortality or first heart failure hospitalization after T-TEER (adjusted HR: 1.62).
Does baseline NT-proBNP predict 2-year mortality or heart failure hospitalization in patients undergoing T-TEER for tricuspid regurgitation?
2,282 patients undergoing tricuspid valve transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER) for tricuspid regurgitation (TR), median age 80, 54% female, 86% NYHA class III/IV.
Baseline and early post-procedural NT-proBNP measurement for risk stratification
Lower vs higher baseline NT-proBNP tertiles (T1 ≤1,674 pg/mL, T2 1,674-3,743 pg/mL, and T3 >3,743 pg/mL)
2-year composite of all-cause mortality or first heart failure hospitalizationcomposite
Baseline and early post-procedural NT-proBNP trajectories provide significant prognostic information for 2-year mortality and heart failure hospitalization in patients undergoing T-TEER.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Background N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) is an established marker of myocardial stress, yet its prognostic role in tricuspid valve transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER) for tricuspid regurgitation (TR) remains unclear.Objectives To evaluate the prognostic value of baseline NT-proBNP and its early post-procedural trajectory after T-TEER.Methods Patients undergoing T-TEER with available baseline NT-proBNP measurements in the EuroTR Registry were analyzed. NT-proBNP was evaluated continuously and by tertiles, with longitudinal changes assessed when serial measurements were available. Endpoints were the 2-year composite of all-cause mortality or first heart failure hospitalization, changes in NT-proBNP, symptomatic improvement and residual TR.Results 2,282 patients (median age 80 76-83 years; 54% female; 86% NYHA class III/IV) with baseline NT-proBNP values (T1 ≤1,674 pg/mL, T2 1,674-3,743 pg/mL, and T3 >3,743 pg/mL) were included. Higher tertiles were associated with greater comorbidity burden, more advanced biventricular remodeling, and more severe TR. Baseline NT-proBNP was independently associated with the primary endpoint (adjusted HR: 1.62; 95% CI 1.29-2.04). Residual TR ≤2+ at discharge occurred in 86.3%, 82.9%, and 81.4% across tertiles (P=0.040) and higher NT-proBNP was associated with lower likelihood of symptomatic improvement (adjusted OR per log10 increase: 0.58; 95% CI: 0.44-0.75; P<0.001). Both baseline NT-proBNP and higher-than-expected 30-day levels relative to baseline were independently associated with higher subsequent risk for the primary endpoint.Conclusions Baseline NT-proBNP was independently associated with 2-year mortality or heart failure hospitalization after T-TEER. Early post-procedural NT-proBNP trajectories provided incremental prognostic information and may identify patients at increased risk.
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Jennifer von Stein
Interventional Cardiology
Philipp von Stein
Karl‐Patrik Kresoja
Interventional Cardiology
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Stein et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Baseline NT-proBNP was independently associated with a 62% increased risk of 2-year all-cause mortality or first heart failure hospitalization after T-TEER (adjusted HR: 1.62).
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b2582a96eeacc4fcec7883 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.48620/95988