Impact of heart failure hospitalizations on clinical outcomes after mitral transcatheter edge‐to‐edge repair: Results from the EXPAND study

Author:

Kessler Mirjam1,Rottbauer Wolfgang1,von Bardeleben Ralph Stephan2,Grasso Carmelo3,Lurz Philipp2,Mahoney Paul4,Price Matthew5,Williams Mathew6,Denti Paolo7,Estevez‐Loureiro Rodrigo8,Kar Saibal9,Maisano Francesco7

Affiliation:

1. Ulm University Heart Center, University of Ulm Ulm Germany

2. University Medical Center of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz Germany

3. Ferrarotto Hospital University of Catania Catania Italy

4. Heart Center Leipzig ‐ University Hospital Leipzig Germany

5. Scripps Clinic La Jolla CA USA

6. Heart Valve Center New York University Langone Health New York NY USA

7. San Raffaele University Hospital Milan Italy

8. Hospital Alvaro Cunqueiro, Vigo Pontevedra Spain

9. Los Robles Regional Medical Center, HCA Healthcare Thousand Oaks CA USA

Abstract

AbstractAimThis analysis aimed to compare the clinical outcomes associated with heart failure (HF) readmissions and to identify associations with HF hospitalizations (HFH) in patients treated with the MitraClip™ NTR/XTR System in the EXPAND study.Methods and resultsThe global, real‐world EXPAND study enrolled 1041 patients with primary or secondary mitral regurgitation (MR) treated with the MitraClip NTR/XTR System. Echocardiograms were analysed by an independent echocardiographic core laboratory. The study population was stratified into HFH and No‐HFH groups based on the occurrence of HFH 1 year post‐index procedure. Clinical outcomes including MR severity, New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class, Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) score, and all‐cause mortality were compared (HFH: n = 181; No‐HFH: n = 860). Both groups achieved consistent 1‐year MR reduction to ≤1+ (HFH vs. No‐HFH: 87.3% vs. 89.5%, p = 0.6) and significant 1‐year improvement in KCCQ scores (+16.5 vs. +22.3, p = 0.09) and NYHA functional class. However, more patients in the No‐HFH group had 1‐year NYHA class ≤II (HFH vs. No‐HFH: 67.9% vs. 81.9%, p < 0.01). All‐cause mortality at 1 year was 36.8% in the HFH group versus 10.4% in the No‐HFH group (p < 0.001). The HFH rate decreased by 63% at 1 year post‐M‐TEER versus 1 year pre‐treatment (relative risk 0.4, p < 0.001). Independent HFH associations were MR ≥2+ at discharge, HFH 1 year prior to treatment, baseline NYHA class ≥III, baseline tricuspid regurgitation ≥2+, and baseline left ventricular ejection fraction ≤40%.ConclusionsThis study reports the impact of HFH on clinical outcomes post‐treatment in the EXPAND study. Results demonstrate that the occurrence of HFH was associated with worse 1‐year survival, and treatment with the MitraClip system substantially reduced HFH and improved patient symptoms and quality of life.

Publisher

Wiley

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