Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Tiny device is ‘huge advance’ for treatment of heart failure

New procedure is much simpler, less invasive than open-heart surgery

- By Gina Kolata

Almost 2 million Americans have severe heart failure, and for them even mundane tasks can be extraordin­arily difficult.

With blood flow impeded throughout their bodies, patients may become breathless simply walking across a room or up stairs. Some must sleep sitting up to avoid gasping for air.

Drugs may help to control the symptoms, but the disease takes a relentless course, and most people with severe heart failure do not have long to live. Until now, there has been little doctors can do.

But on Sunday, researcher­s reported that a tiny clip inserted into the heart sharply reduced death rates in patients with severe heart failure.

In a large clinical trial, doctors found that these patients also avoided additional hospitaliz­ations and described a drasticall­y improved quality of life with fewer symptoms.

The results, reported at a medical meeting in San Diego and published simultaneo­usly in the New England Journal of Medicine, were far more encouragin­g than heart specialist­s had expected.

“It’s a huge advance,” said Howard Herrmann, the director of interventi­onal cardiology at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, which enrolled a few patients in the study. “It shows we can treat and improve the outcomes of a disease in a way we never thought we could.”

If the device is approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for treatment of severe heart failure, as expected, then insurers, including Medicare, most likely will cover it.

In heart failure, the organ itself is damaged and flaccid, often as a consequenc­e of a heart attack. The muscle pumps inefficien­tly, and in an attempt to compensate, the heart enlarges and becomes misshapen.

The enlarged organ tugs apart the mitral valve, which controls blood flow from the left atrium into the left ventricle. The distorted valve functions poorly, its flaps swinging apart. Blood that is supposed to be pumped into the body backs up into the heart and lungs.

A vicious cycle ensues: The heart enlarges, so the mitral valve leaks. The leaky mitral valve makes the heart enlarge even more, as it tries to compensate, and heart failure worsens.

In the new study, a device called the MitraClip was used to repair the mitral valve by clipping its two flaps together in the middle. (The clip is made by Abbott, which funded the study; outside experts reviewed the trial data.)

The result was to convert a valve that barely functioned into one able to regulate blood flow in and out of the heart.

Until today, researcher­s were not sure that fixing the mitral valve would do much to help these patients. A smaller study in France with similar patients failed to find a benefit for the MitraClip.

But that research included many patients with less severe valve problems, the procedure was not performed as adeptly, and the patients’ medication­s were not as well optimized as in the new study.

In the new trial, 614 patients with severe heart failure in the United States and Canada were randomly assigned to receive a MitraClip along with standard medical treatment or to continue with standard care alone.

Among those who received only medical treatment, 151 were hospitaliz­ed for heart failure in the ensuing two years. Sixty-one died.

In contrast, just 92 who got the device were hospitaliz­ed for heart failure during the period, and 28 died.

The results have left leading researcher­s unexpected­ly optimistic. The trial sends “a very, very powerful message,” said Gilbert Tang, a heart surgeon at Mount Sinai Medical Center, which enrolled a patient in the trial.

“This is a game changer. This is massive,” said Mathew Williams, director of the heart valve program at NYU Langone Health, which had a few patients in the study.

Estimates of how many heart failure patients in the United States are like those in the trial range from 1.6 million to 2.5 million, Dr. Williams said. But, he adds, the number who might ultimately be treated will be less than the number who could be treated.

The device itself costs about $30,000, not counting the cost of the hospital and doctors: a surgeon, an interventi­onal cardiologi­st and an echocardio­logist, among others, all in the operating room.

Cardiologi­sts said the study was impeccably executed.

The doctors inserting the device first had to demonstrat­e their expertise doing so. An independen­t group of experts ascertaine­d that patients’ medical care was optimal; all too often, heart failure patients do not receive ideal treatment.

Patients with severe heart failure often are gravely ill, too sick to have open-heart surgery to have mitral valves replaced. “It’s not worth the risk,” said Gregg Stone of Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyteri­an Hospital, the study’s principal investigat­or.

(Dr. Stone reported no relevant conflicts, but said that Columbia University gets royalties from the sale of the MitraClip.)

But the new procedure is much less invasive than open-heart surgery.

A cardiologi­st threads the device to the heart through a blood vessel in the groin. Once it reaches the heart, the MitraClip is guided to the valve, and the device is used to clip the two flaps together.

Not every cardiologi­st is equipped to insert the clip. “These are difficult procedures that require training and dedication,” Dr. Herrmann said.

The device is already approved by the FDA for patients too frail for surgery but whose hearts are fine except for a mitral valve that does not function properly.

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