Comparison of a Pure Plug-Based Versus a Primary Suture-Based Vascular Closure Device Strategy for Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: The CHOICE-CLOSURE Randomized Clinical Trial.


Journal

Circulation
ISSN: 1524-4539
Titre abrégé: Circulation
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0147763

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
18 01 2022
Historique:
pubmed: 6 11 2021
medline: 23 2 2022
entrez: 5 11 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is an established treatment option for patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis and is most commonly performed through the transfemoral access route. Percutaneous access site closure can be achieved using dedicated plug-based or suture-based vascular closure device (VCD) strategies, but randomized comparative studies are scarce. The CHOICE-CLOSURE trial (Randomized Comparison of Catheter-based Strategies for Interventional Access Site Closure during Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) is an investigator-initiated, multicenter study, in which patients undergoing transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement were randomly assigned to vascular access site closure using either a pure plug-based technique (MANTA, Teleflex) with no additional VCDs or a primary suture-based technique (ProGlide, Abbott Vascular) potentially complemented by a small plug. The primary end point consisted of access site- or access-related major and minor vascular complications during index hospitalization, defined according to the Valve Academic Research Consortium-2 criteria. Secondary end points included the rate of access site- or access-related bleeding, VCD failure, and time to hemostasis. A total of 516 patients were included and randomly assigned. The mean age of the study population was 80.5±6.1 years, 55.4% were male, 7.6% of patients had peripheral vascular disease, and the mean Society of Thoracic Surgeons score was 4.1±2.9%. The primary end point occurred in 19.4% (50/258) of the pure plug-based group and 12.0% (31/258) of the primary suture-based group (relative risk, 1.61 [95% CI, 1.07-2.44], Among patients treated with transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement, a pure plug-based vascular closure technique using the MANTA VCD is associated with a higher rate of access site- or access-related vascular complications but a shorter time to hemostasis compared with a primary suture-based technique using the ProGlide VCD. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04459208.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is an established treatment option for patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis and is most commonly performed through the transfemoral access route. Percutaneous access site closure can be achieved using dedicated plug-based or suture-based vascular closure device (VCD) strategies, but randomized comparative studies are scarce.
METHODS
The CHOICE-CLOSURE trial (Randomized Comparison of Catheter-based Strategies for Interventional Access Site Closure during Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) is an investigator-initiated, multicenter study, in which patients undergoing transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement were randomly assigned to vascular access site closure using either a pure plug-based technique (MANTA, Teleflex) with no additional VCDs or a primary suture-based technique (ProGlide, Abbott Vascular) potentially complemented by a small plug. The primary end point consisted of access site- or access-related major and minor vascular complications during index hospitalization, defined according to the Valve Academic Research Consortium-2 criteria. Secondary end points included the rate of access site- or access-related bleeding, VCD failure, and time to hemostasis.
RESULTS
A total of 516 patients were included and randomly assigned. The mean age of the study population was 80.5±6.1 years, 55.4% were male, 7.6% of patients had peripheral vascular disease, and the mean Society of Thoracic Surgeons score was 4.1±2.9%. The primary end point occurred in 19.4% (50/258) of the pure plug-based group and 12.0% (31/258) of the primary suture-based group (relative risk, 1.61 [95% CI, 1.07-2.44],
CONCLUSIONS
Among patients treated with transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement, a pure plug-based vascular closure technique using the MANTA VCD is associated with a higher rate of access site- or access-related vascular complications but a shorter time to hemostasis compared with a primary suture-based technique using the ProGlide VCD. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04459208.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34738828
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.057856
doi:

Banques de données

ClinicalTrials.gov
['NCT04459208']

Types de publication

Comparative Study Journal Article Randomized Controlled Trial Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

170-183

Auteurs

Mohamed Abdel-Wahab (M)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Philipp Hartung (P)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Oliver Dumpies (O)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Danilo Obradovic (D)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Johannes Wilde (J)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Nicolas Majunke (N)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Peter Boekstegers (P)

Department of Cardiology, Helios Klinikum Siegburg, Germany (P.B., R.M.).
Witten Herdecke University, Germany (P.B., M. Seyfarth, M.V., D.H.).

Ralf Müller (R)

Department of Cardiology, Helios Klinikum Siegburg, Germany (P.B., R.M.).

Melchior Seyfarth (M)

Witten Herdecke University, Germany (P.B., M. Seyfarth, M.V., D.H.).
Department of Cardiology, Helios University Hospital Wuppertal, Germany (M. Seyfarth, M.V.).

Marc Vorpahl (M)

Witten Herdecke University, Germany (P.B., M. Seyfarth, M.V., D.H.).
Department of Cardiology, Helios University Hospital Wuppertal, Germany (M. Seyfarth, M.V.).

Philipp Kiefer (P)

University Department of Cardiac Surgery, Heart Center Leipzig, Germany (P.K., T.N., S.L., M.AB., D.H.).

Thilo Noack (T)

University Department of Cardiac Surgery, Heart Center Leipzig, Germany (P.K., T.N., S.L., M.AB., D.H.).

Sergey Leontyev (S)

University Department of Cardiac Surgery, Heart Center Leipzig, Germany (P.K., T.N., S.L., M.AB., D.H.).

Marcus Sandri (M)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Johannes Rotta Detto Loria (J)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Mitsunobu Kitamura (M)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Michael Andrew Borger (MA)

University Department of Cardiac Surgery, Heart Center Leipzig, Germany (P.K., T.N., S.L., M.AB., D.H.).

Anne-Kathrin Funkat (AK)

Leipzig Heart Institute, Germany (A.-K.F., S.H.).

Sven Hohenstein (S)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

Steffen Desch (S)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

David Holzhey (D)

University Department of Cardiac Surgery, Heart Center Leipzig, Germany (P.K., T.N., S.L., M.AB., D.H.).
Department of Cardiac Surgery, Helios University Hospital Wuppertal, Germany (D.H.).

Holger Thiele (H)

Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).
Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig, Germany (M.A.-W., P.H., O.D., D.O., J.W., N.M., M. Sandri, J.R.d.L., M.K., S.D., H.T.).

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