Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Aug 2023)

Procedural success of transcatheter annuloplasty in ventricular and atrial functional tricuspid regurgitation

  • Fabian Barbieri,
  • Isabel Mattig,
  • Isabel Mattig,
  • Isabel Mattig,
  • Niklas Beyhoff,
  • Niklas Beyhoff,
  • Tharusan Thevathasan,
  • Tharusan Thevathasan,
  • Tharusan Thevathasan,
  • Elena Romero Dorta,
  • Carsten Skurk,
  • Carsten Skurk,
  • Karl Stangl,
  • Karl Stangl,
  • Ulf Landmesser,
  • Ulf Landmesser,
  • Ulf Landmesser,
  • Mario Kasner,
  • Henryk Dreger,
  • Henryk Dreger,
  • Markus Reinthaler,
  • Markus Reinthaler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2023.1189920
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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BackgroundTranscatheter annuloplasty is meant to target annular dilatation and is therefore mainly applied in functional tricuspid regurgitation (TR). Due to recent recognition of varying disease pathophysiology and differentiation of ventricular and atrial functional TR (VFTR and AFTR), comparative data regarding procedural success for both disease entities are required.MethodsIn this consecutively enrolled observational cohort study, 65 patients undergoing transcatheter annuloplasty with a Cardioband® device were divided into VFTR (n = 35, 53.8%) and AFTR (n = 30, 46.2%). Procedural success was assessed by comparing changes in annulus dilatation, vena contracta (VC) width, effective regurgitation orifice area (EROA), as well as reduction in TR severity.ResultsOverall, improvement of TR by at least two grades was achieved in 59 patients (90.8%), and improvement of TR by at least three grades was realised in 32 patients (49.2%). Residual TR of ≤2 was observed in 52 patients (80.0%). No significant differences in annulus diameter reduction [VFTR: 11 mm (9–13) vs. AFTR: 12 mm (9–16), p = 0.210], VC reduction [12 mm (8–14) vs. 12 mm (7–14), p = 0.868], and EROA reduction [0.62 cm2 (0.45–1.10) vs. 0.54 cm2 (0.40–0.70), p = 0.204] were reported. Improvement by at least two grades [27 (90.0%) vs. 32 (91.4%), p = 1.0] and three grades [14 (46.7%) vs. 18 (51.4%), p = 0.805] was similar in VFTR and AFTR, respectively. No significant difference in the accomplishment of TR grade of ≤2 [21 (70.0%) vs. 31 (88.6%), p = 0.118] was noted.ConclusionAccording to our results from a real-world scenario, transcatheter annuloplasty with the Cardioband® device may be applied in both VFTR and AFTR with evidence of significant procedural TR reduction.

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