Epiphenomenon or Prognostically Relevant Interventional Target? A Novel Proportionality Framework for Severe Tricuspid Regurgitation

Author:

Fortmeier Vera1ORCID,Lachmann Mark23ORCID,Unterhuber Matthias4,Stolz Lukas5ORCID,Kassar Mohammad6ORCID,Ochs Laurin7ORCID,Gerçek Muhammed1ORCID,Schöber Anne R.4,Stocker Thomas J.35ORCID,Omran Hazem1ORCID,Körber Maria I.7ORCID,Hesse Amelie23ORCID,Friedrichs Kai Peter1ORCID,Yuasa Shinsuke8ORCID,Rudolph Tanja K.1ORCID,Joner Michael39ORCID,Pfister Roman7ORCID,Baldus Stephan7ORCID,Laugwitz Karl‐Ludwig23ORCID,Praz Fabien6,Windecker Stephan6ORCID,Hausleiter Jörg35ORCID,Lurz Philipp4ORCID,Rudolph Volker1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of General and Interventional Cardiology, Heart and Diabetes Center North Rhine‐Westphalia Ruhr University Bochum Bad Oeynhausen Germany

2. First Department of Medicine, Klinikum rechts der Isar Technical University of Munich Munich Germany

3. DZHK (German Center for Cardiovascular Research), partner site Munich Heart Alliance Munich Germany

4. Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig University of Leipzig Leipzig Germany

5. Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik I Klinikum der Universität München, Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich Munich Germany

6. Department of Cardiology Inselspital Bern, Bern University Hospital Bern Switzerland

7. Department of Cardiology, Heart Center University of Cologne Cologne Germany

8. Department of Cardiology Keio University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

9. Department of Cardiology, German Heart Center Munich Technical University of Munich Munich Germany

Abstract

Background Tricuspid regurgitation (TR) frequently develops in patients with long‐standing pulmonary hypertension, and both pathologies are associated with increased morbidity and mortality. This study aimed to improve prognostic assessment in patients with severe TR undergoing transcatheter tricuspid valve intervention (TTVI) by relating the extent of TR to pulmonary artery pressures. Methods and Results In this multicenter study, we included 533 patients undergoing TTVI for moderate‐to‐severe or severe TR. The proportionality framework was based on the ratio of tricuspid valve effective regurgitant orifice area to mean pulmonary artery pressure. An optimal threshold for tricuspid valve effective regurgitant orifice area/mean pulmonary artery pressure ratio was derived on 353 patients with regard to 2‐year all‐cause mortality and externally validated on 180 patients. Patients with a tricuspid valve effective regurgitant orifice area/mean pulmonary artery pressure ratio ≤1.25 mm 2 /mm Hg (defining proportionate TR) featured significantly lower 2‐year survival rates after TTVI than patients with disproportionate TR (56.6% versus 69.6%; P =0.005). In contrast with patients with disproportionate TR (n=398), patients with proportionate TR (n=135) showed more pronounced mPAP levels (37.9±9.06 mm Hg versus 27.9±8.17 mm Hg; P <2.2×10 −16 ) and more severely impaired right ventricular function (tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion: 16.0±4.11 versus 17.0±4.64 mm; P =0.012). Moreover, tricuspid valve effective regurgitant orifice area was smaller in patients with proportionate TR when compared with disproportionate TR (0.350±0.105 cm 2 versus 0.770±0.432 cm 2 ; P <2.2×10 −16 ). Importantly, proportionate TR remained a significant predictor for 2‐year mortality after adjusting for demographic and clinical variables (hazard ratio, 1.7; P =0.006). Conclusions The proposed proportionality framework promises to improve future risk stratification and clinical decision‐making by identifying patients who benefit the most from TTVI (disproportionate TR). As a next step, randomized controlled studies with a conservative treatment arm are needed to quantify the net benefit of TTVI in patients with proportionate TR.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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