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4 Impact of left ventricular assist device therapy on severe secondary mitral regurgitation
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  1. Harish Sharma1,
  2. Mengshi Yuan2,
  3. Iqra Shakeel1,
  4. Andrew Morley-Smith2,
  5. M. Adnan Nadir2,
  6. Colin Chue2,
  7. Saul Myerson3,
  8. Richard P. Steeds2,
  9. Sern Lim2
  1. 1University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
  2. 2Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham
  3. 3Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Oxford

Abstract

Background Severe secondary mitral regurgitation (MR) worsens prognosis in patients with medically managed heart failure (HF). In patients treated by left ventricular assist device (LVAD), it is unclear whether severe MR should be corrected at time of LVAD implantation.

Purpose To evaluate impact of LVAD therapy on severe MR and non-severe MR over 1 year.

Methods Retrospective single centre study of consecutive patients who underwent Heartmate (HM) 2 or HM3 LVAD implantation between January 2011 and March 2020.

Results Of 155 patients, 20 were excluded due to LVAD exchange (n=10), mitral valve repair (n=1), or inaccessible pre-LVAD echocardiography (n=9). Based on multiparametric grading, 29 patients had severe secondary MR and 106 non-severe secondary MR (including none). Severe MR patients were more often female (10/29 (34%) vs 11/106 (10%); p=0.002) but were of similar age (54±12 vs 55±9 years; p=0.624), size (27±5 vs 27±4 kg/m2; p=1.0), with equivalent renal function (53±22 vs 55±20 ml/min/1.73m2; p=0.641) and median pre-operative NT-proBNP [4076 (IQR 206-5438) vs 4914 (IQR 2706-7518) pg/L; p=0.488]. There were similar proportions of patients with ischaemic aetiology [16/29 (55%) vs 66/106 (62%); p=0.488) and those receiving HM2 [11/29 (38%) vs 32/106 (30%)] and HM3 [18/29 (62%) vs 74/106 (70%); p=0.575] LVAD. Echocardiography before LVAD implantation demonstrated similar LV size (LV end-diastolic volume: 133±44 vs 118±50ml/m2; p=0.145, LV end-systolic volume: 107±41 vs 96±59ml/m2; p=0.348) and LV ejection fraction (17±9 vs 17±7%; p=1.0). Severe MR patients had significantly greater (p<0.001) MR by proximal isovolumetric surface area (0.93±0.27 vs 0.60±0.16cm), vena contracta (0.79±0.32 vs 0.57±0.18 cm), regurgitant volume (47±25 vs 24±12ml), and fraction (54±15 vs 37±13%). Follow-up echocardiography was performed at a median 222 days (range 356 days). Patients who received cardiac transplantation were excluded. Relative severities of MR at follow-up were: none=12 (46%), mild=8 (31%), moderate=5 (19%), severe=1 (4%) amongst patients with severe MR pre-LVAD, and none=55 (58%), mild=26 (27%), moderate=13 (14%), severe=1 (1%) amongst patients with non-severe MR pre-LVAD (figure 1). Within 12m, after excluding patients who underwent cardiac transplantation (severe MR n=4; non-severe MR n=2), rates of HF hospitalisation [5/25 (20%) vs 16/104 (15%); p=0.575] and all-cause mortality [2/25 (18%) vs 22/104 (21%); p=0.129)] were similar, irrespective of pre-LVAD MR severity. No patient who died during follow-up had severe MR prior to death.

Conclusion LVAD improves severe MR in 96% of cases, resulting in 1-year rates of HF hospitalisation and mortality similar to patients without severe MR pre-LVAD. These data suggest mitral valve surgery at time of LVAD implantation is not warranted.

Conflict of Interest None

  • Secondary mitral regurgitation
  • left ventricular assist device
  • echocardiography

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