Author:
Carney John P.,Bianco Richard W.
Abstract
AbstractPreclinical in vivo evaluation is an essential step in the progression of new cardiac devices into patient use, with studies predominantly performed in the domestic sheep model. A growing area of interest in cardiac device development is transcatheter mitral valve replacement (TMVR). Clinically, multimodal imaging, or computed tomography (CT) and echocardiography (echo) are used extensively to preoperatively determine mitral valve morphology prior to an intervention, but there is no description on how these modalities can be implemented to support preclinical studies. The purpose of this study is to apply clinically relevant CT and echo acquisition and assessment techniques to a large group of naive research sheep in order to analyze and report modality-related effects on mitral valve dimensional reference intervals in the sheep model. To this end, fifty-five adult domestic sheep underwent preoperative CT and echo exams and resultant images were analyzed using a landmark-based multiplanar measurement protocol and compiled into a master dataset for statistical analysis. We found moderate agreement between CT and echo-derived measurements of the mitral valve in sheep and propose the first clinically-relevant dimensional indices for the sheep’s naive mitral valve which can be used to guide future studies evaluating novel TMVR devices. This study is the first of its kind in proposing a reproducible method for detailed examination of the mitral valve in the sheep model using clinically-relevant multimodal imaging. As in patients, CT and echo can reveal accurate native mitral valve dimensions in the sheep prior to preclinical TMVR studies.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC