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Incidence,Technical Safety,and Feasibility of Coronary Angiography and Intervention Following Self-expanding Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
Authors:Akihito Tanaka  Richard J Jabbour  Luca Testa  Mauro Agnifili  Federica Ettori  Claudia Fiorina  Marianna Adamo  Giuseppe Bruschi  Cristina Giannini  Anna Sonia Petronio  Marco Barbanti  Corrado Tamburino  Francesco De Felice  Bernhard Reimers  Arnaldo Poli  Antonio Colombo  Azeem Latib
Institution:1. Interventional Cardiology Unit, San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy;2. Coronary Revascularisation Unit, IRCCS Policlinico S. Donato, S. Donato Milanese, Italy;3. Cardiothoracic Department, Spedali Civili Brescia, Brescia, Italy;4. \"De Gasperis\" Cardio Center ASST Niguarda Metropolitan Hospital, Milan, Italy;5. Catheterisation Laboratory, Cardiothoracic and Vascular Department, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy;6. Cardio-Thoracic-Vascular Department, Ferrarotto Hospital, University of Catania, Catania, Italy;7. Interventional Cardiology Unit, S. Camillo Forlanini Hospital, Rome, Italy;8. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, Rozzano, Milan, Italy;9. Interventional Cardiology Unit, ASST Ovest Milanese, Legnano Hospital, Milan, Italy;10. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa;11. Department of Cardiology, Montefiore Medical Center, New York, USA
Abstract:BackgroundTranscatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is a well-established treatment option for severe aortic stenosis (AS). AS and coronary artery disease frequently coincide, and therefore some patients may require coronary angiography (CAG) and/or intervention (PCI) post-TAVR. Due to valve stent design, most self-expanding prostheses always cover the coronary ostium, and therefore may hinder future access. The objective of this research was to evaluate the incidence, safety and feasibility of CAG/PCI in patients with prior self-expanding TAVR valves.MethodsAmong 2170 patients (age 82 ± 6 years, 43% male) who underwent TAVR with Corevalve or Evolut prostheses, as part of the Italian CoreValve ClinicalService® framework (data from 13 Italian centers), the occurrence of CAG/PCI following TAVR and periprocedural characteristics were examined.ResultsDuring median follow-up of 379 days, 41 patients (1.9%) required CAG and/or PCI (total 46; 16 CAG, 14 PCI, 16 both PCI/CAG). 56.5% of the procedures were performed under emergency/urgency settings. Left system coronary angiography was successfully performed in most cases (28/32, 87.5%), while right coronary angiography was successful only in 50.0% (16/32). PCI procedures (20 for left system, 3 for right system, 4 for graft) were successfully performed in 93.3% (28/30) of the procedures. No CAG/PCI procedure-related complications including prosthesis dislodgment or coronary ostium dissection occurred.ConclusionsCAG and PCI procedures following CoreValve TAVR is safe and mostly feasible, although the success rate of selective right coronary angiography was relatively low when compared to the left system. Further investigations are required to explore this issue.
Keywords:Corresponding author at: Department of Cardiology  Montefiore Medical Center  New York  USA    TAVR  TAVI  CAG  PCI  Self-expanding valve
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