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September 27, 2019
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Subclinical leaflet thrombosis not tied to serious clinical events: PARTNER 3 CT substudy

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Raj R. Makkar

SAN FRANCISCO — In a CT substudy of the PARTNER 3 trial of low surgical risk patients who underwent transcatheter or surgical aortic valve replacement, hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis and reduced leaflet motion were not associated with death, MI and stroke, according to data presented at TCT 2019.

The findings indicate that routine anticoagulation may not be necessary in patients with subclinical leaflet thrombosis as indicated by hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis and/or reduced leaflet motion, the researchers concluded.

Among the cohort of 184 patients assigned TAVR with a balloon-expandable valve (Sapien 3, Edwards Lifesciences) and 162 patients assigned surgical AVR who had an evaluable CT, there was one clinical event at 30 days, a stroke, and six clinical events between 31 and 365 days in patients with hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis, Raj R. Makkar, MD, the Stephen R. Corday, MD Chair in Interventional Cardiology, associate director of the Heart Institute and director of the interventional cardiology division at Cedars-Sinai, said during a press conference. The substudy was mandated by the FDA.

There were no cases of death or MI at 1 year in patients with hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis, he said.

When the researchers pooled death, stroke, transient ischemic attack and thromboembolic events and compared them between patients who had hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis at 30 days and those who did not, the event rates were numerically but not significantly higher in the leaflet thrombosis group between 7 and 365 days (8.6% vs. 2.9%; P = .11), between days 7 and 30 (2.9% vs. 0.3%; P = .19) and between days 31 and 365 (5.7% vs. 2.6%; P = .27), Makkar said.

“Given the low total number of events, the data are inconclusive and only hypothesis-generating,” he said. “Longer-term follow-up and a larger data set will further clarify the impact on clinical outcomes.”

Hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis was more common in patients who had TAVR than in patients who had surgery, and the difference was significant at 30 days (13.3% vs. 5%; P = .03), although not at 1 year (TAVR, 27.5%; surgery, 20.2%; P = .19), he said. In the overall cohort, leaflet thrombosis was present in 10% of patients at 30 days and in 24% of patients at 1 year.

Of note, he said, among patients who had leaflet thrombosis at 30 days, 56% no longer had it at 1 year, and none of those whose leaflet thrombosis disappeared were on anticoagulation, and among patients who did not have leaflet thrombosis at 30 days, 21% developed it by 1 year.

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“What we found was that hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis and reduced leaflet motion were frequently present in bioprosthetic valves,” Makkar said during the press conference. “Hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis is a dynamic finding, with spontaneous resolution in more than 50% and new appearance in more than 20% of cases.”

Reduced leaflet motion was observed in all patients with hypoattenuated leaflet thrombosis, and the impact of leaflet thrombosis on gradient was “minimal,” Makkar said.

During a panel discussion, Makkar and other experts said the findings cast doubt on the practice of routine anticoagulation for subclinical leaflet thrombosis.

Michael J. Mack

“What surprised me is the percent that resolved without anticoagulation,” Michael J. Mack, MD, FACC, co-investigator of the PARTNER 3 trial and medical director of cardiovascular surgery at Baylor Scott and White Health, said during the discussion. “The impact of all this is that we are not justified recommending routine anticoagulation. It does call into question the recommendation in the guidelines for surgical valves. That was made based on smaller observational studies. Now that we have routine surveillance for surgical valves, it calls into question whether we need 3 months of anticoagulation.” – by Erik Swain

Reference:

Makkar RR, et al. Late-Breaking Trials 2. Presented at: TCT Scientific Symposium; Sept. 25-29, 2019; San Francisco.

Disclosures: PARTNER 3 was funded by Edwards Lifesciences. Makkar reports he consults for and receives research grants from Abbott, Boston Scientific, Edwards Lifesciences and Medtronic. Mack reports he consults for W.L. Gore and Associates and serves as study chair or co-principal investigator for trials sponsored by Abbott, Edwards Lifesciences and Medtronic.