Atrial Secondary Tricuspid Regurgitation: Insights Into the EuroTR Registry.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39663058
Description
Background
Atrial secondary tricuspid regurgitation (A-STR) has been proposed as an important etiologic subentity of secondary tricuspid regurgitation (STR). Patients with A-STR are frequently treated using transcatheter tricuspid valve edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER).
Objectives
The aims of this study were to evaluate prevalence and outcomes following T-TEER for severe A-STR and to compare the results to patients with nonatrial STR.
Methods
The study included patients from the EuroTR (European Registry of Transcatheter Repair for Tricuspid Regurgitation) registry who underwent T-TEER for STR from 2016 until 2022. A-STR was defined as a ratio of end-systolic right atrial area to right ventricular area ≥1.5 in the presence of preserved right ventricular function (tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion >17 mm). The primary study endpoint was 2-year survival free from heart failure hospitalization. Secondary endpoints were 2-year survival, tricuspid regurgitation (TR) reduction at discharge and 1-year follow-up as well as changes in NYHA functional class.
Results
This study included 641 patients (50% women) with a mean age of 79 ± 7 years. The overall prevalence of A-STR was 31% (n = 196). A-STR was associated with a higher prevalence of atrial fibrillation, less frequent comorbidities, better biventricular function, less leaflet tenting, and larger atria. Although TR severity was comparable at baseline, patients with A-STR had more effective procedural TR reduction (TR ≤2+ in 86.9% vs 80.4% of those with nonatrial STR; P = 0.005). Although NYHA functional class improved in both STR subetiologies, the symptomatic burden was lower in patients with A-STR at the latest available follow-up (NYHA functional class ≥III in 46% of patients with nonatrial STR vs 38% in those with A-STR; P = 0.033). Beyond that, A-STR was associated with higher 2-year survival rates free from heart failure hospitalization (66.3% [Q1-Q3: 58.2%-75.5%] vs 47.5% [Q1-Q3: 41.7%-54.7%] in patients with nonatrial STR; P < 0.001). Median survival follow-up was 379 days [Q1-Q3: 155-697 days].
Conclusions
A-STR is a common phenotype of STR and is associated with effective TR reduction and symptomatic reduction after T-TEER.
Atrial secondary tricuspid regurgitation (A-STR) has been proposed as an important etiologic subentity of secondary tricuspid regurgitation (STR). Patients with A-STR are frequently treated using transcatheter tricuspid valve edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER).
Objectives
The aims of this study were to evaluate prevalence and outcomes following T-TEER for severe A-STR and to compare the results to patients with nonatrial STR.
Methods
The study included patients from the EuroTR (European Registry of Transcatheter Repair for Tricuspid Regurgitation) registry who underwent T-TEER for STR from 2016 until 2022. A-STR was defined as a ratio of end-systolic right atrial area to right ventricular area ≥1.5 in the presence of preserved right ventricular function (tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion >17 mm). The primary study endpoint was 2-year survival free from heart failure hospitalization. Secondary endpoints were 2-year survival, tricuspid regurgitation (TR) reduction at discharge and 1-year follow-up as well as changes in NYHA functional class.
Results
This study included 641 patients (50% women) with a mean age of 79 ± 7 years. The overall prevalence of A-STR was 31% (n = 196). A-STR was associated with a higher prevalence of atrial fibrillation, less frequent comorbidities, better biventricular function, less leaflet tenting, and larger atria. Although TR severity was comparable at baseline, patients with A-STR had more effective procedural TR reduction (TR ≤2+ in 86.9% vs 80.4% of those with nonatrial STR; P = 0.005). Although NYHA functional class improved in both STR subetiologies, the symptomatic burden was lower in patients with A-STR at the latest available follow-up (NYHA functional class ≥III in 46% of patients with nonatrial STR vs 38% in those with A-STR; P = 0.033). Beyond that, A-STR was associated with higher 2-year survival rates free from heart failure hospitalization (66.3% [Q1-Q3: 58.2%-75.5%] vs 47.5% [Q1-Q3: 41.7%-54.7%] in patients with nonatrial STR; P < 0.001). Median survival follow-up was 379 days [Q1-Q3: 155-697 days].
Conclusions
A-STR is a common phenotype of STR and is associated with effective TR reduction and symptomatic reduction after T-TEER.
Date of Publication
2024-12-09
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
T-TEER
•
atrial fibrillation
•
atrial secondary tricuspid regurgitation
•
functional secondary tricuspid regurgitation
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Stolz, Lukas | |
Kresoja, Karl-Patrik | |
von Stein, Jennifer | |
Fortmeier, Vera | |
Koell, Benedikt | |
Rottbauer, Wolfgang | |
Goebel, Bjoern | |
Denti, Paolo | |
Achouh, Paul | |
Rassaf, Tienush | |
Barreiro-Perez, Manuel | |
Boekstegers, Peter | |
Rück, Andreas | |
Doldi, Philipp M | |
Novotny, Julia | |
Zdanyte, Monika | |
Adamo, Marianna | |
Vincent, Flavien | |
Schlegel, Philipp | |
von Bardeleben, Ralph Stephan | |
Stocker, Thomas J | |
Weckbach, Ludwig T | |
Besler, Christian | |
Brunner, Stephanie | |
Grapsa, Julia | |
Patterson, Tiffany | |
Thiele, Holger | |
Kister, Tobias | |
Tarantini, Giuseppe | |
Masiero, Giulia | |
De Carlo, Marco | |
Konstandin, Mathias H | |
Van Belle, Eric | |
Metra, Marco | |
Geisler, Tobias | |
Estévez-Loureiro, Rodrigo | |
Luedike, Peter | |
Karam, Nicole | |
Maisano, Francesco | |
Lauten, Philipp | |
Kessler, Mirjam | |
Kalbacher, Daniel | |
Rudolph, Volker | |
Iliadis, Christos | |
Lurz, Philipp | |
Hausleiter, Jörg |
Additional Credits
Clinic of Cardiology
Series
JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1876-7605
1936-8798
Access(Rights)
open.access