Quantification of Debris Captured Using TCEP During VIV TAVR With BVF
- Conditions
- Aortic Valve Disease
- Registration Number
- NCT05093764
- Lead Sponsor
- Saint Luke's Health System
- Brief Summary
The objective of this study is to quantify the amount of debris captured by the SENTINEL transcatheter cerebral embolic protection (TCEP) device in patients undergoing valve in valve transcatheter aortic valve replacement (VIV TAVR) with bioprosthetic valvular fracture (BVF)
- Detailed Description
SENTINEL VIV-TAVR is a prospective, single-center, single-arm, unblinded pilot trial. A total of 20 subjects with severe symptomatic bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration, who are deemed to be at high or prohibitive mortality risk related to surgical aortic valve replacement, and are undergoing VIV-TAVR and BVF, will be enrolled at the Mid-America Heart Institute, St-Luke's Hospital of Kansas City. Subjects will initially have an aortic arch angiogram done to confirm appropriate anatomy, followed by the SENTINEL device implanted through right radial artery approach. After that, patients will undergo VIV TAVR, using a commercially available transcatheter heart valve, followed by bioprosthetic valve fracture (BVF) as indicated.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 20
- Men and Women ≥ 18 years of age
- The patient has severe bioprosthetic aortic valve degeneration (stenosis, insufficiency, or mixed valve disease) and a clinical indication for VIV TAVR
- The bioprosthetic valve can be fractured with high pressure balloon inflation.
- The patient is deemed at prohibitive or high mortality risk related to surgical aortic valve replacement as assessed by the Heart Team
- For procedural planning, all patients must have a CT angiogram of the chest, abdomen and pelvis to confirm:
A. Adequate femoral access for the TAVR procedure B. Appropriate right subclavian, carotid and brachiocephalic as well as left carotid artery anatomy for the SENTINEL device deployment.
- The patient or legal representative is able to understand and willing to provide written informed consent to participate in the trial
- The patient is able and willing to return for required follow-up visits and examinations
- The patient is evaluated by the multidisciplinary heart-valve team and found to be a suitable for the procedure.
- Patients with low or moderate mortality risk from surgical aortic valve replacement
- Patients with bioprosthetic valves that cannot be fractured with standard non-compliant valvuloplasty balloons (Table 1)
- Patients with evidence of significant carotid artery stenosis (i.e., carotid stenosis ≥ 50%), noted on ultrasound duplex imaging or CT angiography.
- Patients with evidence of right subclavian/brachiocephalic artery stenosis
- Patients with right arm/forearm dialysis fistula or graft.
- Patients with harvested right radial artery for a previous coronary bypass surgery.
- Patients with prohibitive aortic arch anomalies for SENTINEL device implantation.
- The patient with history of cerebrovascular event (CVA) within within 6 months.
- Patient with incidental left atrial appendage thrombus noted on TEE or CT imaging.
- The patient is actively enrolled in another trial of a cardiovascular device or an investigational drug (post-market study participation and registries are acceptable)
- The patient is pregnant, or pregnancy is planned during the course of the investigation if patient is of child-bearing potential
- Any clinically significant medical condition or presence of any laboratory abnormality performed prior to randomization that is considered by the investigator to be clinically important and could interfere with the conduct of the study or not meeting procedure guidelines for TAVR or SENTINEL
- The patient has a life expectancy of less than one year
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Quantity of debris During surgical procedure Amount of debris captured by the SENTINEL TCEP device in VIV TAVR with BVF patients compared to historical data
Complication rate Through hospital discharge, an average of 2.5 days In-hospital stroke, device embolization rate, procedure-related major bleeding
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Mortality Through hospital discharge, an average of 2.5 days Deaths from all causes
MACCE Through hospital discharge, an average of 2.5 days Major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events
Related Research Topics
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Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City
🇺🇸Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City🇺🇸Kansas City, Missouri, United StatesSheila Erwin, RNContact816-932-7996serwin@saintlukeskc.orgAdnan Chhatriwalla, MDPrincipal Investigator