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  3. Phenotypic Clustering Analysis of Patients Rejected for Mitral Valve Interventions: Implications for Future Transcatheter Technologies.
 

Phenotypic Clustering Analysis of Patients Rejected for Mitral Valve Interventions: Implications for Future Transcatheter Technologies.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/88324
Date of Publication
May 7, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Cardiology

Author
Ludwig, Sebastian
Coisne, Augustin
Hamzi, Kenza
Ben Ali, Walid
Scotti, Andrea
Koell, Benedikt
Duncan, Alison
Makkar, Raj
Akodad, Mariama
Bleiziffer, Sabine
Nickenig, Georg
Kaneko, Tsuyoshi
Ruge, Hendrik
Adam, Matti
Sondergaard, Lars
Dahle, Gry
Taramasso, Maurizio
Walther, Thomas
Kempfert, Joerg
Obadia, Jean-François
Chehab, Omar
Tang, Gilbert H L
Goel, Sachin
Fam, Neil
Denti, Paolo
Praz, Fabien
Clinic of Cardiology
von Bardeleben, Ralph Stephan
Hausleiter, Jörg
Latib, Azeem
Conradi, Lenard
Modine, Thomas
Pezel, Théo
Granada, Juan F
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2047-2412
2047-2404
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1093/ehjci/jeaf141
PubMed ID
40329826
Uncontrolled Keywords

clustering

medical therapy

mitral regurgitation

non-supervised machin...

transcatheter mitral ...

Description
Aims
Although several treatment options are available for patients with severe mitral regurgitation (MR), a significant proportion of patients remain ineligible for any mitral valve (MV) intervention. We aimed to analyze the phenotypic characteristics of surgical high-risk patients ineligible for MV interventions using an unsupervised phenotypic clustering approach.Methods And Results
Between 2014 and 2022, the CHOICE-MI registry included 984 patients with MR undergoing screening for transcatheter mitral valve replacement at 33 international sites. For this study, only patients with screening failure receiving medical therapy alone were included. Patients receiving transcatheter or surgical treatment were excluded. A cluster analysis using K-means was performed on baseline clinical, demographic, and imaging variables to identify different patient phenotypes. Among 284 patients with MR (77.4±8.82 years, 56.0% female, EuroSCORE II: 6.6±5.8%) considered ineligible for any MV intervention, two clinically distinct phenogroups (PG) were identified using unsupervised hierarchical clustering of principal components. PG1: elderly women with primary MR, preserved left ventricular function, and annular calcification; and PG2: patients with secondary MR, advanced heart failure, and high prevalence of comorbidities. One-year all-cause mortality did not differ between the phenogroups (PG1: 21.4%, PG2: 23.4%, p=0.89). Predictors of mortality were albumin, renal function, extracardiac arteriopathy for PG1, and albumin, coronary artery disease, and prior myocardial infarction for PG2.Conclusions
This study identified two major subgroups among patients ineligible for mitral interventions showing profound differences in clinical and anatomical profiles. Identifying these factors may drive technological evolution to address the unmet clinical need for therapeutic options in MR patients.Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier
NCT04688190 (CHOICE-MI Registry).
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/210834
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jeaf141.pdftextAdobe PDF867.35 KBpublished restricted
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