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New Clip May Offer Non-Surgical Repair of Mitral Regurgitation

November / December 2004

EVEREST I is the only study approved by the FDA under an Investigational Device Exemption to research the percutaneous treatment of mitral regurgitation (MR) utilizing the Evalve Clip™. Interventional cardiologists at Penn are participating in this investigational clinical trial, helping to pioneer a novel approach to repair insufficient or leaky mitral valves. This procedure may eliminate the need for open heart surgery for some patients with severe MR. The condition occurs when the flaps or leaflets of the mitral valve fail to close properly and allow blood to leak backward through the valve to the atrium.

Performed in the cardiac catheterization laboratory under general anesthesia, the procedure uses standard flouroscopic and echocardiographic imaging. After routine transseptal access, the tiny, metallic clip is introduced, positioned and, once MR has been adequately reduced, secured to the valve. The patient may be discharged as soon as one day after the procedure.

The Evalve Clip was designed to perform an edge-to-edge (Alfieri technique) repair of the mitral valve in a beating heart as opposed to the conventional, open surgical approach. The edge-to-edge technique involves apposing the middle scallops of the anterior and posterior leaflet with a stitch creating a so-called “dual” or “double orifice” mitral valve. This approach has now been successfully used to treat degenerative MR due to prolapse of either one or both leaflets and for functional regurgitation secondary to ischemia and/or
cardiomyopathy.

“Although the Alfieri technique is used frequently in Europe, it has not been practiced as regularly in the United States, largely because it is a non-anatomic repair. When performing an open procedure, the surgeon is more likely to repair the valve using a technique that gives the closest appearance to what it should look like when it was working properly,” says Howard C. Herrmann, MD, professor of cardiovascular medicine and director of interventional cardiology and Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. “This is a novel, non-invasive approach to creating a different type of valve.”

In addition to being the most common type of heart valve insufficiency, MR is a familiar finding in patients with heart failure and has a detrimental effect on left ventricular function. Patients with mild MR may remain asymptomatic for many years. However, moderate to severe MR gradually produces ventricular contractile dysfunction and dilation. The most common symptoms of MR include shortness of breath with exercise or at rest, congestive heart failure, swelling of the extremities, and decreased exercise tolerance. Successful surgery and now, clip placement, with MR reduction will improve a patient’s functional capacity, exercise tolerance, and ability to breathe.

Approximately 50,000 mitral valve replacement operations are performed annually in the United States. It is estimated that up to a million people may have some degree of MR that is either not severe enough to warrant open heart surgery or the patient is not a candidate for open heart surgery. Some of these patients may, however, be candidates for less invasive procedures.

“The early results are encouraging. There have been no complications or safety issues and the majority of patients have experienced an improvement in the severity of their MR,” adds Dr. Herrmann. Performed for the first time in June 2003, the Evalve clip surgery has been used to treat 16 patients nationwide, with three of these performed by Dr. Herrmann at Penn.

“Eventually, we hope to identify patients who will routinely obtain excellent results with this procedure and other patients for whom surgery is either relatively contraindicated or for whom a perfect result with complete resolution of their mitral regurgitation is not necessary,” says Dr. Herrmann.

“This procedure represents the early stages of what may eventually be other percutaneous treatments for valvular heart disease. Twenty-five years ago when balloon angioplasty was invented for coronary artery disease, no one would have predicted that today interventional cardiologists would perform more revascularization procedures than cardiac surgeons. I anticipate more innovations and engineering advances that will allow us to eventually treat a substantial number of patients with valvular heart disease without surgery,” adds Dr. Herrmann.

Dr. Herrmann and his colleagues are actively investigating other techniques to percutaneously repair valves, including a clip that can be placed in the coronary sinus to remold the annulus and change the shape of the mitral valve to improve the closing of the leaflets, and a stented bioprosthetic valve to treat malfunctions in the aortic valve.

 


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