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Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation in Inoperable Patients with Severe Aortic Stenosis. Press Conference. Martin B. Leon, MD on behalf of the PARTNER Investigators. TCT 2010; Washington, DC; September 23, 2010. PARTNER Study Design. Total = 1058 patients. n=358. n= 700.
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Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation in Inoperable Patients with Severe Aortic Stenosis Press Conference Martin B. Leon, MD on behalf of the PARTNER Investigators TCT 2010; Washington, DC; September 23, 2010
PARTNER Study Design Total = 1058 patients n=358 n= 700 2 Parallel Trials: Individually Powered High Risk Inoperable ASSESSMENT: Transfemoral Access ASSESSMENT: Transfemoral Access High Risk TA High Risk TF 1:1 Randomization 1:1 Randomization 1:1 Randomization Not In Study TAVI Trans femoral Surgical AVR Standard Therapy (usually BAV) TAVI Trans femoral Surgical AVR TAVI Trans femoral VS VS VS Primary Endpoint: All Cause Mortality (1 yr)(Non-inferiority) Primary Endpoint: All Cause Mortality over length of trial (Superiority) Symptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis ASSESSMENT: High Risk AVR Candidate 3105 Total Patients Screened
Primary and Co-Primary Endpoints PRIMARY: All-cause mortality over the duration of the study Superiority test (two-sided), 85% power to detect a difference, α = 0.05, sample size = 350 total patients CO-PRIMARY: Hierarchical composite of all-cause mortality and repeat hospitalization Non-parametric method described by Finkelstein and Schoenfeld (multiple pair-wise comparisons) > 95% power to detect a difference, α = 0.05 Positive study if both endpoints P < 0.05, or if either endpoint is < 0.025
Study Devices Edwards-SAPIEN THV Retroflex 1 23mm and 26mm valve sizes 22F and 24F sheath sizes
Inclusion Criteria Severe calcific aortic stenosis defined as echo derived valve area of < 0.8 cm2(EOA index <0.5cm2), and mean gradient > 40 mmHg or jet velocity > 4.0 m/s NYHA functional class II or greater Risk of death or serious irreversible morbidity as assessed by cardiologist and two surgeons must exceed 50%
Standard Rx TAVI All Cause Mortality • HR [95% CI] =0.54 [0.38, 0.78] • P (log rank) < 0.0001 All-cause mortality (%) Months
All Cause Mortality Standard Rx • ∆ at 1 yr = 20.0%NNT = 5.0 pts TAVI 50.7% All-cause mortality (%) 30.7% Months
Compare, at random, every TAVI patient with every Standard Rx patient; 179 x 179 (32,041) patient pairs, which did better? #1, compare “time to death” 72% chance that we know who died first If so, 63% chance that Standard Rx patient died first and 37% chance that TAVI patient died first #2, if necessary, compare “time to repeat hospitalization” 17% chance that we know who had repeat hosp first If so, 75% chance that Standard Rx patient had repeat hosp first and 25% chance that TAVI patient had repeat hosp first Finklestein & Schoenfeld Analysis(hierarchical multiple pair-wise comparison) FS Method Produces a P-value < 0.0001
Six-Minute Walk Tests Walking Distance P = 0.002 P = 0.67 P = 0.004 P = 0.55 Walking distance (meters) Baseline 1 Year 30 Days
Percent TAVI Standard Rx TAVI Standard Rx TAVI Standard Rx TAVI Standard Rx Treatment Visit Baseline 30 Day 6 Month 1 Year NYHA Class Over TimeSurvivors • P = 0.68 • P < 0.0001 • P < 0.0001 • P < 0.0001 I II III IV
Standard Rx 70 TAVI 44.6 44.4 60 39.5 50 33.0 40 Mean Gradient (mm Hg) 30 43.2 12.1 11.3 10.8 20 10 0 Mean Gradients Over Time P < 0.0001 6 Months N=100 1 Year N=89 Baseline N=163 30 Day N=143 • Error bars = ± 1 Std Dev
Paravalvular Regurgitation: TAVI 30 Day 6 Month 1 Year No changes over time None/Trace Moderate Mild Severe
Conclusions - 1 In patients with severe AS and symptoms, who are not suitable candidates for surgery… • Standard therapy (including BAV in 83.8% of pts) did not alter the dismal natural history of AS; all-cause and cardiovascular mortality at 1 year was 50.7% and 44.6% respectively • Transfemoral balloon-expandable TAVI, despite limited operator experience and an early version of the system, was associated with acceptable 30-day survival (5% after randomization in the intention-to-treat population)
Conclusions - 2 • TAVI was superior to standard therapy, markedly reducing the rate of… • all-cause mortality by 46%, P < 0.0001, NNT = 5.0 pts • cardiovascular mortality by 61%, P < 0.0001, NNT = 4.1 pts • all-cause mortality and repeat hospitalization • hierarchical (FS method), P < 0.0001 • non-hierarchical (KM analysis) by 54%, P < 0.0001, NNT = 3.4 pts
Conclusions - 3 • TAVI improved cardiac symptoms (NYHA class, P < 0.0001) and six minute walking distance (P = 0.002), after 1-year follow-up • TAVI resulted in more frequent complications at 30 days, including… • major vascular complications, 16.2% vs. 1.1%, P < 0.0001 • major bleeding episodes, 16.8% vs. 3.9%, P < 0.0001 • major strokes, 5.0% vs. 1.1%, P = 0.06
Conclusions - 4 • Serial echocardiograms in TAVI patients indicated… • reduced mean gradients (P < 0.0001) which were unchanged during 1-year FU • frequent paravalvular AR, which was usually trace or mild (~90%), remained stable during 1-year FU, and rarely required further Rx.
Clinical Implications • Balloon-expandable TAVI should be the new standard of care for patients with aortic stenosis who are not suitable candidates for surgery! • Next generation devices (e.g. SAPIEN XT) may help to reduce the frequency of procedure-related complications in the future. • The ultimate value of TAVI will depend on careful assessment of bioprosthetic valve durability, which will mandate obligatory long-term clinical and echocardiography FU of all TAVI patients.