Mixed Valvular Disease Following Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: Quantification and Systematic Differentiation Using Clinical Measurements and Image‐Based Patient‐Specific In Silico Modeling

Author:

Keshavarz‐Motamed Zahra12,Khodaei Seyedvahid1,Rikhtegar Nezami Farhad2,Amrute Junedh M.23,Lee Suk Joon4,Brown Jonathan2,Ben‐Assa Eyal25,Garcia Camarero Tamara6,Ruano Calvo Javier6,Sellers Stephanie78,Blanke Philipp78,Leipsic Jonathon78,de la Torre Hernandez Jose M.26,Edelman Elazer R.29

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

2. Institute for Medical Engineering and Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA

3. Division of Biology and Biological Engineering California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA

4. Harvard Medical School Boston MA

5. Cardiology Division Massachusetts General Hospital

6. Hospital Universitario Marques de Valdecilla IDIVAL Santander Spain

7. St. Paul's Hospital Vancouver British Columbia Canada

8. Department of Radiology University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

9. Cardiovascular Division Brigham and Women's Hospital

Abstract

Background Mixed valvular disease (MVD), mitral regurgitation (MR) from pre‐existing disease in conjunction with paravalvular leak (PVL) following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), is one of the most important stimuli for left ventricle (LV) dysfunction, associated with cardiac mortality. Despite the prevalence of MVD, the quantitative understanding of the interplay between pre‐existing MVD, PVL, LV, and post‐TAVR recovery is meager. Methods and Results We quantified the effects of MVD on valvular‐ventricular hemodynamics using an image‐based patient‐specific computational framework in 72 MVD patients. Doppler pressure was reduced by TAVR (mean, 77%; N=72; P <0.05), but it was not always accompanied by improvements in LV workload. TAVR had no effect on LV workload in 22 patients, and LV workload post‐TAVR significantly rose in 32 other patients. TAVR reduced LV workload in only 18 patients (25%). PVL significantly alters LV flow and increases shear stress on transcatheter aortic valve leaflets. It interacts with mitral inflow and elevates shear stresses on mitral valve and is one of the main contributors in worsening of MR post‐TAVR. MR worsened in 32 patients post‐TAVR and did not improve in 18 other patients. Conclusions PVL limits the benefit of TAVR by increasing LV load and worsening of MR and heart failure. Post‐TAVR, most MVD patients (75% of N=72; P <0.05) showed no improvements or even worsening of LV workload, whereas the majority of patients with PVL, but without that pre‐existing MR condition (60% of N=48; P <0.05), showed improvements in LV workload. MR and its exacerbation by PVL may hinder the success of TAVR.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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