Mitral valve repair: surgery or interventional treatment?
Mitral valve repair: surgery or interventional treatment?
31.03.2023
A leaking mitral valve can be repaired surgically or with catheter-based techniques. A so-called mitral valve prolapse is particularly common, in which part of the valve protrudes (prolapses) into the left atrium. The American PRIMARY study investigates which method is most suitable for repairing mitral valves in patients with degenerative mitral valve insufficiency who are at low surgical risk.
The German arm of the study, with 113 patients, is led by Prof. Volkmar Falk of the German Heart Institute at Charité. The German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) funds the German study arm with 1.36 million euros.
Mitral valve prolapse (center and right) compared to a healthy valve.
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Mitral valve insufficiency is the second most common acquired heart valve disease. Around one million people in Germany are affected. The mitral valve allows blood to pass from the left atrium into the left ventricle. During the contraction of the left ventricle the valve is closed to prevent backflow into the left atrium. If it leaks, blood flows back into the atrium and leads to pulmonary congestion. Therefore, a typical symptom of mitral valve insufficiency is shortness of breath. Fibroelastic deficiency can lead to chordal elongation or rupture leading to displacement of valvular segments into the left atrium, a condition termed mitral valve prolapse
Endoscopic repair of the mitral valve (“keyhole” surgery) has been the standard of care for many years. This procedure replaces the diseased chordae endoscopically and stabilizes the valve annulus with an implant (mitral ring). This technique is commonly applied to correct mitral valve prolapse.
In addition, a catheter-based procedure has also been established in the last ten years. In this procedure, a catheter system is inserted through a vein in the groin and advanced through the atrial septum in the left atrium. One or more clips are then applied to permanently connect opposite parts of the two mitral valve leaflets. The procedure is currently most often used in patients with heart failure and so called secondary mitral insufficiency, a condition when the valve is still healthy but no longer closes properly because the left ventricle is dysfunctional and enlarged.
The clip procedure for mitral valve prolapse has so far been used to treat patients with a very high surgical risk. "In people with mitral valve prolapse and lower surgical risk, we can use both methods under certain conditions. However, comparative data on short and long-term benefits are still lacking," says Prof. Volkmar Falk of the German Heart Center at Charité. He leads the German arm of the U.S. PRIMARY study.
The study will enroll patients 65 and older with severe mitral regurgitation due to mitral valve prolapse. Patients are randomly divided into two groups. One-half will be treated surgically - usually endoscopically. The other group will be treated by catheter-based procedures.
The study team will check three years after treatment whether patients are alive and well or need to be readmitted due to recurrence of mitral valve insufficiency or heart failure. In addition, other outcomes of the repair will also be reviewed. "We have a unique opportunity here to determine which method is better in the long term. That's why we continue monitoring patients until ten years after treatment," Falk says.
MEDICA-tradefair.com; Source: Deutsches Zentrum für Herz-Kreislauf-Forschung e.V.