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Cardiovascular revascularization medicine : including molecular interventions 2017-Nov

Procedural and thirty-day outcomes following transfemoral implantation of the fully repositionable and retrievable Lotus valve without routine pre-dilatation in a consecutive patient cohort: a single centre experience.

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Neil Ruparelia
Katharine Thomas
James D Newton
Kate Grebenik
Amar Keiralla
George Krasopoulos
Rana Sayeed
Adrian P Banning
Rajesh K Kharbanda

Keywords

Abstract

UNASSIGNED

The Lotus valve (Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA) is a contemporary transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) device that is fully repositionable and retrievable to aid implantation and optimise procedural results. The ability to implant the device without routine pre-dilatation is another possible advantage reducing associated risks and procedure times. The aim of this study is to report procedural and 30-day outcomes following TAVI in a consecutive patient group presenting with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis with the Lotus valve system without routine pre-dilatation.

UNASSIGNED

146 consecutive patients that underwent TAVI at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford between January 2015 - December 2016 were retrospectively analysed.

RESULTS

The mean age was 81.1±7.4 years and the mean logistic EuroSCORE was 14.6±10. 134 (91.8%) of patients were treated under conscious sedation. 144 (98.6%) of procedures were successful. Two patients (1.4%) died during the follow-up period. None or mild residual aortic regurgitation was achieved in 98.6% of patients. The mean and peak transvalvular gradients were 8.6±3.6mmHg and 16.6±6.6mmHg respectively. Eight patients (5.5%) suffered a stroke. Over time, there was a reduction in major vascular complications (14.3% vs. 2.2%, p=0.03) and a trend toward shorter procedure times (97.6±44.3 vs. 86.8±31.4 minutes, p=0.14) and the administration of less contrast (104.4±45.2 vs. 91.7±37.6 millilitres, p=0.16). The overall new pacemaker implantation rate was 36.3%.

CONCLUSIONS

The use of the Lotus valve as a 'workhorse' device without routine pre-dilatation is safe and efficacious and is associated with a very low incidence of residual aortic regurgitation and acceptable transvalvular haemodynamics.

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