Impact of Central vs. Noncentral Predominant Jet Location on Clinical Outcomes: Results From the EXPANDed Studies.
Mitral transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (M-TEER) is a treatment option for patients with severe mitral regurgitation (MR) at a high surgical risk. Although most MR involves central A2P2 jets, a subset present with noncentral jets, which may introduce procedural complexity and influence outcomes. The objective of the study was to evaluate the impact of main MR jet location (central [A2P2] versus noncentral [A1/P1 or A3/P3]) on procedural success and clinical outcomes following M-TEER.
This analysis used the EXPANDed data set, which included patients undergoing M-TEER with MitraClip G3/G4 systems and echocardiographic core laboratory-assessed main MR jet location. One-year clinical, echocardiographic, and functional outcomes were assessed.
A total of 1785 patients had main jets at A2P2 and 81 at A1P1 or A3P3 (non-A2P2). Non-A2P2 patients more frequently had degenerative MR, prior mitral valve procedures, and better left ventricular function. Procedural success was high and comparable (A2P2: 95.9%, non-A2P2: 92.5%; p = 0.15), with low 30-day major adverse event rates in both (A2P2: 4.2%, non-A2P2: 7.4%; p = 0.16). MR ≤ 1+ was achieved in both groups at 1 year (A2P2: 91%, non-A2P2: 84%, p = 0.11). New York Heart Association class ≤ II improved through 1 year in both groups (A2P2: 81%, non-A2P2: 88%). Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire overall summary improved significantly with no difference between groups at 1 year (A2P2: Δ13 points, non-A2P2: Δ20 points). One-year all-cause mortality was similar (10.7 vs. 13.7%; p = 0.47).
In this largest analysis to date of patients with severe MR, main MR jet location did not affect the safety or effectiveness of the MitraClip system. These findings support the use of M-TEER across a range of anatomical presentations, including non-A2P2 MR jets.
This analysis used the EXPANDed data set, which included patients undergoing M-TEER with MitraClip G3/G4 systems and echocardiographic core laboratory-assessed main MR jet location. One-year clinical, echocardiographic, and functional outcomes were assessed.
A total of 1785 patients had main jets at A2P2 and 81 at A1P1 or A3P3 (non-A2P2). Non-A2P2 patients more frequently had degenerative MR, prior mitral valve procedures, and better left ventricular function. Procedural success was high and comparable (A2P2: 95.9%, non-A2P2: 92.5%; p = 0.15), with low 30-day major adverse event rates in both (A2P2: 4.2%, non-A2P2: 7.4%; p = 0.16). MR ≤ 1+ was achieved in both groups at 1 year (A2P2: 91%, non-A2P2: 84%, p = 0.11). New York Heart Association class ≤ II improved through 1 year in both groups (A2P2: 81%, non-A2P2: 88%). Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire overall summary improved significantly with no difference between groups at 1 year (A2P2: Δ13 points, non-A2P2: Δ20 points). One-year all-cause mortality was similar (10.7 vs. 13.7%; p = 0.47).
In this largest analysis to date of patients with severe MR, main MR jet location did not affect the safety or effectiveness of the MitraClip system. These findings support the use of M-TEER across a range of anatomical presentations, including non-A2P2 MR jets.
Authors
Rogers Rogers, Price Price, Singh Singh, Mahoney Mahoney, Williams Williams, Denti Denti, Asgar Asgar, Aiyer Aiyer, Huang Huang, Zamorano Zamorano, Asch Asch, Maisano Maisano, Kar Kar, Stephan von Bardeleben Stephan von Bardeleben, Rodriguez Rodriguez
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