Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic disorder characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy, left ventricle outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO), systolic anterior motion (SAM), and subsequent mitral regurgitation (MR). Although its risk/benefit profile remains unclear, transcatheter mitral edge-to-edge repair (M-TEER) may be beneficial for patients at high or prohibitive surgical risk. Objectives: Evaluate the safety and efficacy of M-TEER in patients with obstructive HCM and moderate-to-severe or severe SAM-related MR. Methods: Retrospective, international, multicenter study including 35 symptomatic patients treated with M-TEER at 12 centers. MVARC definitions were applied. Echocardiographic and clinical outcomes were assessed at discharge, 30 days, 1 year, and last available follow-up. Results: MVARC technical, 30-day device and procedural success were achieved in 94%, 91% and 88% of the cases, respectively. MR <2 was achieved in 97% of patients. LVOT gradient decreased from 62.0 mmHg (IQR 35.5-92.0) to 16.0 mmHg (IQR 12.0-22.0), p<0.05, and the reduction persisted at a median follow-up of 523 days. NYHA class I/II increased from 31% to 88% at last follow-up. The composite outcome (all-cause death, admission for acute decompensated heart failure, M-TEER re-do, surgical mitral valve replacement) occurred in 26% of the cases, mainly driven by ADHF. Conclusions: M-TEER appears to be a feasible and safe therapeutic option for anatomically suitable patients with obstructive HCM, LVOTO and SAM-related MR who are at high or prohibitive surgical risk. Larger scale data are warranted to further elucidate the role of M-TEER in this subset of patients.
TRANScatheter edge-to-edge rePAir for SAM related mitral REgurgitation in patieNTs with HCM. The TRANSPARENT registry
Tarantini, Giuseppe;
2025
Abstract
Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic disorder characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy, left ventricle outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO), systolic anterior motion (SAM), and subsequent mitral regurgitation (MR). Although its risk/benefit profile remains unclear, transcatheter mitral edge-to-edge repair (M-TEER) may be beneficial for patients at high or prohibitive surgical risk. Objectives: Evaluate the safety and efficacy of M-TEER in patients with obstructive HCM and moderate-to-severe or severe SAM-related MR. Methods: Retrospective, international, multicenter study including 35 symptomatic patients treated with M-TEER at 12 centers. MVARC definitions were applied. Echocardiographic and clinical outcomes were assessed at discharge, 30 days, 1 year, and last available follow-up. Results: MVARC technical, 30-day device and procedural success were achieved in 94%, 91% and 88% of the cases, respectively. MR <2 was achieved in 97% of patients. LVOT gradient decreased from 62.0 mmHg (IQR 35.5-92.0) to 16.0 mmHg (IQR 12.0-22.0), p<0.05, and the reduction persisted at a median follow-up of 523 days. NYHA class I/II increased from 31% to 88% at last follow-up. The composite outcome (all-cause death, admission for acute decompensated heart failure, M-TEER re-do, surgical mitral valve replacement) occurred in 26% of the cases, mainly driven by ADHF. Conclusions: M-TEER appears to be a feasible and safe therapeutic option for anatomically suitable patients with obstructive HCM, LVOTO and SAM-related MR who are at high or prohibitive surgical risk. Larger scale data are warranted to further elucidate the role of M-TEER in this subset of patients.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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