Transcatheter heart valve interventions: where are we? Where are we going?
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Transcatheter heart valve interventions have transformed the outcomes of patients with valvular heart disease (VHD) who are unfavourable candidates for surgery. Technological advances have allowed extension of these interventions to younger or lower risk patients and those with other forms of VHD and may in the future permit earlier treatment of VHD in less symptomatic patients or those with moderate disease. The balance of risks and benefits is likely to differ between lower and higher risk patients, and more evidence is needed to evaluate the net benefit of transcatheter technology in these groups. As academic researchers, clinicians, industry, and patient stakeholders collaborate to research these broader indications for transcatheter valve interventions, it is essential to address (i) device durability and deliverability, (ii) specific anatomical needs (e.g. bicuspid aortic valves, aortic regurgitation, mitral and tricuspid valve disease), (iii) operator training, and (iv) the reinforced importance of the multidisciplinary Heart Team.
Contributors

Bernard D Prendergast
Author

Helmut Baumgartner
Author

Victoria Delgado
Author

Olivier Gérard
Author

Michael Haude
Author

Anders Himmelmann
Author

Bernard Iung
Author

Matthew Leafstedt
Author

Jasmine Lennartz
Author

Francesco Maisano
Author

Elena Andreassi Marinelli
Author

Thomas Modine
Author

Markus Mueller
Author

Simon R Redwood
Author

Olaf Rörick
Author

Cherif Sahyoun
Author

Erika Saillant
Author

Lars Søndergaard
Author

Martin Thoenes
Author

Karen Thomitzek
Author

Marion Tschernich
Author

Alec Vahanian
Author

Olaf Wendler
Author

Evelyn Julia Zemke
Author

