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  3. Atrial Secondary Tricuspid Regurgitation: Insights Into the EuroTR Registry.
 

Atrial Secondary Tricuspid Regurgitation: Insights Into the EuroTR Registry.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/84537
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.jcin.2024.10.028
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.
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
Kassar, Mohammadorcid-logo
Clinic of Cardiology
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
Wild, Mirjam G
Besler, Christian
Brunner, Stephanie
Toggweiler, Stefan
Grapsa, Julia
Patterson, Tiffany
Thiele, Holger
Kister, Tobias
Tarantini, Giuseppe
Masiero, Giulia
De Carlo, Marco
Sticchi, Alessandro
Konstandin, Mathias H
Van Belle, Eric
Metra, Marco
Geisler, Tobias
Estévez-Loureiro, Rodrigo
Luedike, Peter
Karam, Nicole
Maisano, Francesco
Lauten, Philipp
Praz, Fabien
Clinic of Cardiology
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
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