Safety and Efficacy Continued Access Study of the Medtronic CoreValve® System in the Treatment of Symptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis in Very High Risk Subjects and High Risk Subjects Who Need Aortic Valve Replacement
Severe Aortic Stenosis
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Severe Aortic Stenosis focused on measuring Valvular Heart Disease, Critical Aortic Stenosis, Severe Aortic Stenosis, Extreme Risk, High Risk, Aortic Valve Replacement
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
High Risk: Subject must have co-morbidities such that one cardiologist and two cardiac surgeons agree that predicted risk of operative mortality is ≥15% (and predicted operative mortality or serious, irreversible morbidity risk of < 50%) at 30 days.
OR
Extreme Risk: Subject must have co-morbidities such that one cardiologist and two cardiac surgeons agree that medical factors preclude operation, based on a conclusion that the probability of death or serious morbidity exceeds the probability of meaningful improvement. Specifically, the predicted operative risk of death or serious, irreversible morbidity is ≥ 50% at 30 days.
Subject has senile degenerative aortic valve stenosis with:
- Mean gradient > 40 mmHg, or jet velocity greater than 4.0 m/sec by either resting or dobutamine stress echocardiogram, or simultaneous pressure recordings at cardiac catheterization (either resting or dobutamine stress), AND
- An initial aortic valve area of ≤ 0.8 cm2 (or aortic valve area index ≤ 0.5 cm2/m2) by resting echocardiogram or simultaneous pressure recordings at cardiac catheterization
- Subject is symptomatic from his/her aortic valve stenosis, as demonstrated by New York Heart Association (NYHA) Functional Class II or greater.
- The subject or the subject's legal representative has been informed of the nature of the trial, agrees to its provisions and has provided written informed consent as approved by the IRB of the respective clinical site.
- The subject and the treating physician agree that the subject will return for all required post-procedure follow-up visits.
Exclusion Criteria:
Clinical
- Evidence of an acute myocardial infarction ≤ 30 days before the intended treatment.
- Any percutaneous coronary or peripheral interventional procedure performed within 30 days prior to the MCS TAVI procedure including bare metal and drug eluting stents.
- Blood dyscrasias as defined: leukopenia (WBC < 1000mm3), thrombocytopenia (platelet count <50,000 cells/mm3), history of bleeding diathesis or coagulopathy.
- Untreated clinically significant coronary artery disease requiring revascularization.
- Cardiogenic shock manifested by low cardiac output, vasopressor dependence, or mechanical hemodynamic support.
- Need for emergency surgery for any reason.
- Severe ventricular dysfunction with left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) < 20% as measured by resting echocardiogram.
- Recent (within 6 months) cerebrovascular accident (CVA) or transient ischemic attack (TIA).
- End stage renal disease requiring chronic dialysis or creatinine clearance < 20 cc/min.
- Active GI bleeding that would preclude anticoagulation.
A known hypersensitivity or contraindication to any of the following which cannot be adequately pre-medicated:
- Aspirin
- Heparin (HIT/HITTS) and bivalirudin
- Nitinol (titanium or nickel)
- Ticlopidine and clopidogrel
- Contrast media
- Ongoing sepsis, including active endocarditis.
- Subject refuses a blood transfusion.
- Life expectancy < 12 months due to associated non-cardiac co-morbid conditions.
- Other medical, social, or psychological conditions that in the opinion of an Investigator precludes the subject from appropriate consent.
- Severe dementia (resulting in either inability to provide informed consent for the trial/procedure, prevents independent lifestyle outside of a chronic care facility, or will fundamentally complicate rehabilitation from the procedure or compliance with follow-up visits).
- Currently participating in an investigational drug or another device trial.
Symptomatic carotid or vertebral artery disease.
Anatomical
High Risk:Native aortic annulus size < 20 mm or > 29 mm per the baseline diagnostic imaging (until 23mm valve enrollment completion/closure in the CoreValve® US Pivotal Trial-High Risk Cohort)
OR
Extreme Risk: Native aortic annulus size < 18 mm or > 29 mm per the baseline diagnostic imaging. (High risk and extreme risk upon 23mm valve enrollment completion/closure in the CoreValve® US Pivotal Trial-High Risk Cohort)
- Pre-existing prosthetic heart valve any position.
- Mixed aortic valve disease (aortic stenosis and aortic regurgitation with predominant aortic regurgitation (3-4+)).
- Moderate to severe (3-4+) or severe (4+) mitral or severe (4+) tricuspid regurgitation.
- Moderate to severe mitral stenosis.
- Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy.
- Echocardiographic evidence of new or untreated intracardiac mass, thrombus or vegetation.
- Severe basal septal hypertrophy with an outflow gradient.
- Aortic root angulation (angle between plane of aortic valve annulus and horizontal plane/vertebrae) > 70° (for femoral and left subclavian/axillary access) and > 30° (for right subclavian/axillary access).
- Ascending aorta diameter >43 mm if the aortic annulus diameter is 23-29 mm; ascending aortic diameter > 40 mm if the aortic annulus diameter is 20-23 mm; or an ascending aorta diameter > 34 mm if the aortic annulus diameter is 18-20 mm (Extreme Risk only until 23 mm valve enrollment completion/closure in the CoreValve® US Pivotal Trial-High Risk Cohort).
- Congenital bicuspid or unicuspid valve verified by echocardiography.
Sinus of valsalva anatomy that would prevent adequate coronary perfusion.
Vascular
- Transarterial access not able to accommodate an 18Fr sheath.
Sites / Locations
- Banner Good Samaritan
- University of Southern California University Hospital
- Kaiser Permanente - Los Angeles Medical Center
- El Camino Hospital
- VA Palo Alto Health Care System
- Hartford Hospital
- Yale New Haven Hospital
- Washington Hospital Center / Georgetown Hospital
- Mount Sinai Medical Center
- University of Miami Health System / Jackson Memorial Hospital
- Piedmont Heart Institute
- Saint Joseph's Hospital of Atlanta
- Loyola University Medical Center
- St. Vincent Heart Center of Indiana
- Iowa Heart Center
- University of Kansas Hospital
- Cardiovascular Institute of the South/Terrebonne General
- Johns Hopkins Hospital
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
- University of Michigan Health Systems
- Detroit Medical Center Cardiovascular Institute
- St. John Hospital and Medical Center
- Spectrum Health Hospitals
- Morristown Memorial Hospital
- North Shore University Hospital/ Long Island Jewish Hospital
- NYU Langone Medical Center
- The Mount Sinai Medical Center
- Lenox Hill Hospital
- St. Francis Hospital
- Duke University Medical Center
- Wake Forest University - Baptist Medical Center
- University Hospitals - Case Medical Center
- The Ohio State University Medical Center - The Richard M. Ross Heart Hospital
- Riverside Methodist Hospital
- Geisinger Medical Center
- Pinnacle Health
- University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
- Vanderbilt University Medical Center
- Baylor Heart and Vascular Hospital
- Texas Heart Institute at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital
- The Methodist Hospital - The Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center
- University of Vermont Medical Center
- Inova Fairfax Hospital
- Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center
- St. Luke's Medical Center - Aurora Health Care
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Experimental
Experimental
Extreme Risk: TAVI Iliofemoral
Extreme Risk: TAVI Non-Iliofemoral
High Risk: TAVI
Extreme Risk Patients: Medtronic CoreValve® System Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI); Iliofemoral Access
Extreme Risk Patients: Medtronic CoreValve® System Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI); Non-Iliofemoral Access
High Risk Surgical Patients: Medtronic CoreValve® System Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI)