Association of transcatheter edge-to-edge repair with improved survival in older patients with severe, symptomatic degenerative mitral regurgitation
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Randomized clinical trials demonstrated transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) efficacy in improving outcome vs. medical management for functional mitral regurgitation, but limited randomized data are available for the treatment of degenerative mitral regurgitation (DMR). We aimed to compare the outcome of older patients treated with TEER vs. unoperated DMR.
Registries including consecutive patients ≥65 years with symptomatic severe DMR treated with TEER (MitraSwiss and Minneapolis Heart Institute registries) or unoperated (MIDA registry) were analysed. Survival was compared overall and after matching for age, sex, EuroSCORE II, and ejection fraction. The study included 1187 patients (872 treated with TEER and 315 unoperated). During 24 ± 17 months of follow-up, 430 patients died, 18 ± 1% at 1 year and 50 ± 2% at 4 years. Patients undergoing TEER had similar age (82 ± 6 vs. 82 ± 7 years) and sex to unoperated patients, but higher surgical risk/comorbidity (EuroSCORE II 3.98 ± 4.28% vs. 2.77 ± 2.46%), more symptoms, and atrial fibrillation (
Amongst older patients with severe symptomatic DMR at high surgical risk, mitral TEER was associated with higher survival vs. unoperated patients. Successful control of mitral regurgitation was key to survival improvement with mitral TEER, which should be actively considered in patients deemed inoperable.
Contributors

Paul Sorajja
Author

Giovanni Pedrazzini
Author

Maurizio Taramasso
Author

Mara Gavazzoni
Author

Francesco Grigioni
Author

Richard Bae
Author

Christophe Tribouilloy
Author

Jean-Louis Vanoverschelde
Author

Hector Michelena
Author

Vinayak N Bapat
Author

David Vancraynest
Author

Catherine Klersy
Author

Moreno Curti
Author

Prabin Thapa
Author

Maurice Enriquez-Sarano
Author
Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation Minneapolis , United States of America




