Methods: Between July 2012 and February 2013, 15 patients (12 males, 3 females; mean age 60.8±13.0 years; range 35 to 78 years) underwent MitraClip implantation in our clinic. All patients had symptomatic severe functional mitral regurgitation with high surgical risk or were judged to be inoperable by the cardiovascular surgeons.
Results: The success of the procedure was 93.33%. MitraClip was successfully implanted in all patients except one. Following the procedure, severity of the mitral regurgitation decreased by 2.1±0.5 grade on average. The mean NYHA functional capacity improved from 3.9±0.4 to 2.6±0.8 after one month during follow-up. Two patients (13.33%) died within the first month of follow-up due to noncardiac causes.
Conclusion: The MitraClip procedure can be performed safely to the symptomatic patients with severe functional mitral regurgitation who have otherwise high surgical risk or are judged to be inoperable. Our initial experience demonstrated acute echocardiographic and early clinical improvement in these patients.
Surgery, especially when repair is possible, is the standard treatment for MR in symptomatic patients or those with LV dilatation and dysfunction.[4] However, in clinical practice, because of associated comorbidities and a high surgical risk, many of these patients do not undergo surgery.[5] Additionally, in patients with functional MR, no survival benefit has been shown,[6,7] and some studies have suggested a high MR recurrence rate.[7-9] Therefore, surgery for secondary MR remains a challenge. Less invasive interventional procedures have been developed to percutaneously correct MR, with the MitraClip procedure (Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL, USA) having received considerable attention in high-risk patients with both functional and organic MR.
The aim of this study was to present the procedural success and short-term results of 15 patients who underwent MitraClip implantation at our heart center.
All procedural and in-hospital events were recorded, and success was defined as the implantation of the MitraClip and at least a one-grade reduction in the MR without any obstruction. After discharge, the patients were evaluated via echocardiography and a six-minute walking test one month after the implantation.
Patient selection
All patients evaluated by our heart team for
MitraClip implantation had New York Heart
Association (NYHA) class 3-4 functional capacity
under optimal medical therapy with severe functional
MR. Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and
transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) were
performed on all patients to assess the MR severity,
leaflet structure, and MR etiology. In addition, they were
also evaluated according to the whether they met the
appropriate criteria for MitraClip implantation. Mitral
regurgitation severity was assessed according to the European Association of Echocardiography (EAE)[10]
and was classified as mild (1+), mild-to-moderate (2+),
moderate-to-severe (3+), or severe (4+). Based on the
echocardiographic parameters, the patients who had
a thick interatrial septum, severe leaflet calcifications
(in the grasping region), thick valve leaflets (>5 mm),
an immobile posterior leaflet, a coaptation length of
less than 2 mm, a short and fixed posterior leaflet,
rheumatic etiology, or a mitral valve planimetric area
of smaller than 4 cm2 were excluded from the study.
Other exclusion criteria for MitraClip implantation
were a short life expectancy, malignancies, and poor
quality of TEE images. Table 1 summarizes the
echocardiographic parameters for each patient that
were used to determine whether the procedure was
appropriate. These criteria were based on the anatomic
criteria set by the Endovascular Valve Edge-to-Edge
Repair Study (EVEREST).[11,12] The originally applied
EVEREST criteria served as reference parameters,
but not all of them were accepted as being absolute
for exclusion. For example, we included patients with
a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of <25%,
a LV end-systolic diameter of >55 mm, and patients
with renal insufficiency, all of which were excluded in
the EVEREST trial. Furthermore, partial calcification
of the leaflets, the length and depth of the coaptation,
an absolute valve area of <4 cm2, a poor EF, and a
noncentral location of jet origin were not considered to
be absolute contraindications for the procedure.
Table 1: Echocardiographic eligibility criteria for MitraClip implantation
Procedure
The implantation was performed in a catheterization
laboratory under general anesthesia with two
interventional cardiologists, one echocardiographer,
one anesthesiologist, one technician, and one nurse
present. Fluoroscopy and real-time TEE, were used
during the implantation for guidance to ensure the
success of the procedure. Although three-dimensional
(3D) TEE is not necessary, it can decrease the length of the procedure and increase the success rate. Invasive
arterial pressure was monitored through the radial
artery, and prophylactic antibiotics were given before
implanting the chip. The sheath was placed in the right
femoral vein, and a transseptal puncture was performed
with a Brockenbrough needle. The localization of
this puncture was vital for the progress and success
of the implantation, with the ideal point being in a
superoposterior location approximately 3.5 to 4 cm
from the mitral annulus in the TEE four-chamber
view (Figure 1) so that there would be enough space
in the left atrium for manipulating the clips. The
patient was heparinized after the transseptal puncture,
and the activated clotting time (ACT) was followed
by a 15-minute interval that was kept between 250
and 350 seconds. After the puncture, a 0.035 extrastiff
exchange guidewire was advanced to the left
upper pulmonary vein, and the transseptal sheath was
exchanged for a steerable guide catheter and dilator.
The clip delivery system was then introduced into
the guide catheter, and the MitraClip device was
advanced into the left atrium. With the guidance of
the fluoroscopy and TEE, the clip was then directed
toward the MR jet. The arms of the clip were opened
in the left atrium, checked for perpendicularity, and
directed toward the ventricle. As soon as both leaflets
were inserted on the clip, the grippers were moved
down, and the clip was closed (Figure 2). After the MitraClip was used to control the reduction in MR
along with the gradient on the mitral valve, and
the stabilization of both leaflets had been achieved
by the clip, it was detached from the connections
and released (Figure 3). In five of the patients, the
reduction in the MR was not satisfactory at this point,
and a second clip was then inserted. The procedure
concluded with the hemostasis of the access site,
which was accomplished with figure-of-eight suturing.
The patients were prescribed dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin 100 mg and clopidogrel 75 mg) for at least
three months afterwards and were informed about
infective endocarditis prophylaxis during the first six
postprocedural months.
Figure 1: Transesophageal images of optimal transseptal puncture.
Figure 2: Transesophageal view while grasping the mitral leaflets.
Figure 3: Color Doppler view of mitral regurgitation before and after the procedure.
Table 2: Baseline demographics and clinical features (n=15)
Procedure and in-hospital results
The MitraClip was successfully implanted in 14
(93.33%) of the 15 patients, with one clip being
implanted in nine patients (64.28%), and two clips in
the other five (35.71%). We could not implant a clip
in one patient (6.66%) because the interatrial septum
was deviated too much toward the right atrium due to
increased left atrial pressure, and the location of the
interatrial septal puncture could have possibly led to
an unsuccessful result.
The mean procedure time was 183.8±81.0 minutes (range 90-300 minutes) with a mean septal puncture time of 36.2±32.1 minutes. The success rate (correct positioning of the clip with a reduction in MR severity by at least one grade) was 100% in the patients with the implanted clip. There was improvement in the MR severity in all of the patients intraoperatively just after the clip implantation. However, the average MR severity decreased significantly from 4+ to 1.89±0.48+ after the intervention, and no significant iatrogenic mitral valve stenosis was detected after the procedure. The mean mitral valve gradient was 3.13±1.16 mmHg.
Procedural mortality was 0%, and all of the patients tolerated the procedure well. However, two died while still in the hospital (13.33%), and one died on the fifth day after the procedure, before the day of externalization, due to a head trauma. In addition, the patient for whom the implantation of the clip failed, died three weeks later due to noncardiac causes (pneumonia and sepsis). The mean length of hospital stay was 5.4±2.3 days, and the mean intensive care unit (ICU) stay was one day for the clip-implanted patients.
One-month follow-up results
At the one-month follow-up, one patient with a
past history of gastrointestinal bleeding and chronic
renal failure required a blood transfusion along with
an endoscopic examination because of gastrointestinal
bleeding after externalization. It is possible that dual
antiplatelet treatment might have contributed to this event.
Twelve (92.30%) of the 13 surviving patients reported clinical improvement. The average functional status of the patients improved from NYHA class 3.9±0.4 to 2.6±0.8, and their six-minute walking distances improved from 276.2±150.7 to 378.0±168.4 meters. Furthermore, the N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-pro-BNP) levels decreased from 3642.3±3220.0 to 2025.8±810.3 pg/ml. The average MR severity was 2.20±0.33+ at one month, which was a little higher than the post-procedural MR but still lower than the baseline.
Figure 4: Mitral regurgitation severity reduction by grade in fifteen patients.
Different classifications for mitral valve regurgitation have been identified by Carpentier et al.,[13] and Kumar et al.[14] and it has been categorized etiologically as either primary or secondary according to the presence or absence of leaflet pathology. Surgical mitral valve repair has been successful in cases of organic mitral valve disease, but the role of conventional surgery for patients with severe secondary MR, compared to those with primary MR, has not been well-defined, and its outcome has been less predictable. Two studies described undersized mitral annuloplasty in patients with end-stage cardiomyopathy and secondary MR.[15,16] The results of that procedure with regard to low operative mortality, enhanced functional capacity, and improved ventricular function have also been reported by in two other studies.[17,18] However, longterm follow-up failed to show any survival benefit of isolated reduction annuloplasty for severe secondary MR with NYHA class 3-4 heart failure.[6] In addition, Mihaljevic et al.[19] could not demonstrate long-term functional status or improved survival in patients with severe functional ischemic MR. The most appropriate indications and effective types of intervention for secondary ischemic MR remain open to debate. In the most recent European guidelines for valvular heart diseases,[4] mitral valve surgery was recommended for symptomatic patients with severe secondary MR and NYHA class 1 if they had an EF of >30% and underwent revascularization and for those with NYHA class 2a if they had an EF of <30% with an option for revascularization and a viable myocardium. Mitral valve surgery is also possible for symptomatic patients with NYHA class 2b under medical therapy with severe secondary MR and low comorbidity if they have an EF of >30% with no option of revascularization. However, medical therapy is still the most preferred treatment for those with an EF of <30% and no possibility of revascularization. In the event that the medical therapy fails, cardiac resynchronization therapy, ventricular assist devices (VADs), and transplantation are other treatment alternatives.[4] These patients may especially be a target for percutaneous valve repair treatment in order to postpone transplantation. Surgical mitral valve repair may also be tried for this purpose, but many of these patients cannot undergo surgery because of associated comorbidities.
Creating a double mitral valve orifice by the approximation of two mitral leaflets was first performed surgically by Alfieri et al.[20] This is a relatively simple type of surgery and can be applied to both organic and functional MR, and its simplicity and effectiveness led to the development of similar catheter-based procedures.[21] The first human application of the MitraClip was performed in 2003, and it has now been successfully implanted in over 6,000 patients worldwide. Soon after it was introduced, the EVEREST I and II studies were published.[10,11,22] The EVEREST I trial evaluated the MitraClip system for its initial safety, and the study population consisted of patients with moderate-to-severe MR with clinical symptoms or LV dysfunction. It found that percutaneous edge-to-edge mitral valve repair could be performed safely and that in a significant proportion of patients, a reduction in MR could be achieved. The EVEREST II trial was a randomized comparison of mitral valve surgery and percutaneous mitral repair that evaluated the safety and efficacy of the MitraClip procedure compared with conventional valvular surgery.[22] It demonstrated that although percutaneous mitral valve repair was less effective than conventional surgery in reducing MR severity, it was safer than surgery, especially in the first month, and had the same clinical benefits. A subgroup in the EVEREST II trial was made up of 78 highrisk patients, and one-year survival was significantly higher in the high risk study group compared to control group after the MitraClip procedure (76.4% vs. 55.3%, p=0.047).
Franzen et al.[24,25] reported successful outcomes and short-term durability of the MitraClip in functional MR patients, with a significant reduction in MR along with clinical improvement in European clinical trials compared with those in the United States where the majority of treated patients had degenerative MR.
Herein, we report on the safety and efficacy of percutaneous mitral valve repair in patients with functional MR and those patients who underwent successful clip implantation experienced clinical and echocardiographic benefits at the one-month follow-up with regard to reduction in MR severity, improvement in NYHA functional class, NT-ProBNP reduction, and an increased six-minute walking distance.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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