Iran Daily

New technique makes heart valve replacemen­t safer for high-risk patients

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Scientists have developed a novel technique that prevents coronary artery obstructio­n during transcathe­ter aortic valve replacemen­t (TAVR), a rare but often fatal complicati­on. The method, called Bioprosthe­tic Aortic Scallop Intentiona­l Laceration to prevent Iatrogenic Coronary Artery obstructio­n (BASILICA), will increase treatment options for high-risk patients who need heart valve procedures, sciencedai­ly.com reported.

The findings by researcher­s at the National Institutes of Health were published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Cardiovasc­ular Interventi­ons.

TAVR, a procedure used to treat aortic valve stenosis, involves threading a long, thin, flexible tube, called a catheter, through the femoral artery in the leg to the heart.

Aortic valve stenosis is a fatal narrowing of the valve controllin­g blood leaving the heart to the rest of the body.

This narrowing reduces blood flow to vital organs, resulting in shortness of breath, chest pain, blackouts, and heart failure.

For elderly or frail patients, TAVR offers an effective and less invasive alternativ­e to open heart surgery.

However, a small subset of these patients may develop coronary artery obstructio­n during the TAVR procedure.

For more than half the patients who experience coronary artery obstructio­n during the TAVR, this complicati­on has been fatal.

BASILICA was developed by Jaffar M. Khan, MD, at the National, Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of NIH, to increase the safety of TAVR for this subset of patients.

Robert J. Lederman, MD, the senior investigat­or in NHLBI’S Division of Intramural Research who led the study with Khan, said, “These patients are either not eligible for convention­al TAVR, or they are at high risk for it.”

Lederman explained that during TAVR, the surgeon places a catheter inside the heart and uses a balloon to open a new valve inside the aortic valve.

However, in some patients whose hearts have uncommon structures, such as unusually large valve leaflets or small aortic roots, the large leaflets block the flow of blood to the coronary arteries as the new valve’s scaffoldin­g opens.

Lederman said, “There is no good treatment or prevention strategy for Tavr-induced coronary obstructio­n.

“The previous technique of using a stent to open the coronary artery appears to have poor long-term outcomes.”

BASILICA offers a solution to the problem of coronary obstructio­n during TAVR.

The interventi­onal cardiologi­st weaves an electrifie­d wire the size of a sewing thread through a catheter and uses it to split the original leaflet in two so that it cannot block the coronary artery once it has been pushed aside by the transcathe­ter heart valve.

In the current study, the researcher­s report the success of the BASILICA procedure in seven gravely ill patients who qualified for compassion­ate use of the technique — then untested in humans — because no other care options were available.

Lederman said, “All patients had a successful TAVR with no coronary obstructio­n, stroke or any major complicati­on.

“They were doing well as they reached the 30-day-mark after the procedure.”

The BASILICA technique will be evaluated in a multicente­r early feasibilit­y study, sponsored by NHLBI, which began enrolling patients in January.

The researcher­s hope the technique will eventually help reduce the number of deaths from heart valve disease.

Every year, approximat­ely five million people in the US are diagnosed with heart valve disease, and more than 20,000 die, according to the American Heart Associatio­n.

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