Impact of Cerebral Embolic Protection Devices on Disabling Stroke after Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: Updated Results from the STS/ACC TVT Registry.

Butala NM, Kapadia SR, Secemsky EA, Gallup D, Kosinski AS, Vemulapalli S, Messenger JC, Yeh RW, Cohen DJ. Impact of Cerebral Embolic Protection Devices on Disabling Stroke after Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: Updated Results from the STS/ACC TVT Registry. Circulation. Cardiovascular interventions. 2024;. PMID: 38837174

Background: Cerebral embolic protection devices (EPDs) were developed to mitigate the risk of stroke during transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), but their benefit remains unproven. In the PROTECTED-TAVR trial, EPD use did not reduce periprocedural stroke (primary study outcome) but led to a 62% reduction in the secondary endpoint of disabling stroke. Given these results, the impact of EPDs during TAVR remains unclear. Methods: We used STS/ACC TVT registry data to examine the association between EPD use and a proxy for disabling stroke among transfemoral TAVR patients between 1/2018-6/2023. The primary outcome was in-hospital disabling stroke-defined as stroke associated with either in-hospital death or discharge to a non-home location. We evaluated the association between EPD use and disabling stroke using instrumental variable (IV) analysis with site-level preference for EPD use as the instrument-a quasi-experimental approach that can support causal inference. In addition, we performed a propensity-score based comparison using overlap weighting as a secondary analysis. Results: The study population consisted of 414,649 patients of whom 53,389 (12.9%) received an EPD. The unadjusted rate of in-hospital disabling stroke was 0.7% among the EPD group and 0.9% in the no EPD group. EPD use was associated with a reduction in disabling stroke in both IV analysis (RR 0.87; 95% CI: 0.73-1.00) and propensity-weighted (PW) analysis (OR 0.79; 95% CI: 0.70-0.90) but was not associated with a reduction in non-disabling stroke. In subgroup analyses, the benefit of EPD was greater among those with versus without prior stroke (interaction p<0.05 for IV and PW). Conclusions: In the largest study to date, among patients undergoing TAVR, EPD use was associated with a small, borderline significant reduction in stroke associated with death or a discharge to a non-home location (a proxy for disabling stroke) that is likely to be causal in nature. Taken together with previous mechanistic and clinical studies, these findings provide credible evidence that EPDs benefit patients undergoing TAVR.

Last updated on 07/23/2024
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