Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2024)

Early Outcomes of Two Large Mitral Valve Transcatheter Edge-to-Edge Repair Devices—A Propensity Score Matched Multicenter Comparison

  • Philipp von Stein,
  • Hendrik Wienemann,
  • Jennifer von Stein,
  • Atsushi Sugiura,
  • Tetsu Tanaka,
  • Refik Kavsur,
  • Can Öztürk,
  • Marcel Weber,
  • Jean Marc Haurand,
  • Patrick Horn,
  • Tobias Kister,
  • Amir Abbas Mahabadi,
  • Niklas Boeder,
  • Tobias Ruf,
  • Muhammed Gerçek,
  • Christoph Mues,
  • Christina Grothusen,
  • Julia Novotny,
  • Ludwig Weckbach,
  • Henning Guthoff,
  • Felix Rudolph,
  • Amin Polzin,
  • Stephan Baldus,
  • Tienush Rassaf,
  • Holger Thiele,
  • Helge Möllmann,
  • Malte Kelm,
  • Volker Rudolph,
  • Ralph Stephan von Bardeleben,
  • Holger Nef,
  • Peter Luedike,
  • Philipp Lurz,
  • Jörg Hausleiter,
  • Roman Pfister,
  • Victor Mauri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13144187
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 14
p. 4187

Abstract

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Background/Objectives: Previous trials reported comparable results with PASCAL and earlier MitraClip generations. Limited comparative data exist for more contemporary MitraClip generations, particularly the large MitraClip XT(R/W). We aimed to evaluate acute and 30-day outcomes in patients undergoing mitral valve transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (M-TEER) with one of the large devices, either PASCAL P10 or MitraClip XT(R/W) (3rd/4th generation). Methods: A total of 309 PASCAL-treated patients were matched by propensity score to 253 MitraClip-treated patients, resulting in 200 adequately balanced pairs. Procedural, clinical, and echocardiographic outcomes were collected for up to 30 days, including subgroup analysis for mitral regurgitation (MR) etiologies. Results: PASCAL and MitraClip patients were comparable regarding age (80 vs. 79 years), sex (female: 45.5% vs. 50.5%), and MR etiology (degenerative MR: n = 94, functional MR [FMR]: n = 96, mixed MR: n = 10 in each group). Technical success rates were comparable (96.5% vs. 96.0%; p > 0.999). At discharge, the mean gradient was higher (3.3 mmHg vs. 3.0 mmHg; p = 0.038), and the residual mitral valve orifice area was smaller in MitraClip patients (3.0 cm2 vs. 2.3 cm2; p p = 0.132). However, reduction to MR ≤ 1+ was more frequently observed in PASCAL patients (67.7% vs. 56.6%; p = 0.029), driven by the FMR subgroup (74.0% vs. 60.0%; p = 0.046). No difference was observed in 30-day mortality (p = 0.204) or reduction in NYHA-FC to ≤II (p > 0.999). Conclusions: Both M-TEER devices exhibited high and comparable rates of technical success and MR reduction to ≤2+. PASCAL may be advantageous in achieving MR reduction to ≤1+ in patients with FMR.

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