Long-term clinical outcome and performance of transcatheter aortic valve replacement with a self-expandable bioprosthesis
European Heart Journal

Abstract
In the last decade, transcatheter aortic valve (TAV) replacement determined a paradigm shift in the treatment of patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis. Data on long-term TAV performance are still limited. We sought to evaluate the clinical and haemodynamic outcomes of the CoreValve self-expandable valve up to 8-year follow-up (FU).
Nine hundred and ninety inoperable or high-risk patients were treated with the CoreValve TAV in eight Italian Centres from June 2007 to December 2011. The median FU was 4.4 years (interquartile range 1.4–6.7 years). Longest FU reached 11 years. A total of 728 died within 8-year FU (78.3% mortality from Kaplan–Meier curve analysis). A significant functional improvement was observed in the majority of patients and maintained over time, with 79.3% of surviving patients still classified New York Heart Association class ≤ II at 8 years. Echocardiographic data showed that the mean transprosthetic aortic gradient remained substantially unchanged (9 ± 4 mmHg at discharge, 9 ± 5 mmHg at 8 years,
While TAVs are questioned about long-term performance and durability, the results of the present research provide reassuring 8-year evidence on the CoreValve first-generation self-expandable bioprosthesis.
Contributors

Azeem Latib
Author

Nedy Brambilla
Author

Claudia Fiorina
Author

Marianna Adamo
Author

Cristina Giannini
Author

Marco Angelillis
Author

Marco Barbanti
Author

Carmelo Sgroi
Author

Arnaldo Poli
Author

Erica Ferrara
Author

Giuseppe Bruschi
Author

Claudio Francesco Russo
Author

Montorfano Matteo
Author

Francesco De Felice
Author

Carmine Musto
Author

Salvatore Curello
Author

Antonio Colombo
Author

Corrado Tamburino
Author

Anna Sonia Petronio
Author

Francesco Bedogni
Author

