Background: Published procedural and short-term outcome of the Portico valve for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI) is limited. We report a single-center patient series assessing procedural and 30-day outcome of this device.
Methods and results: Procedural and 30-day follow-up data were prospectively collected from a consecutive series of 73 patients (80.7±6.9years, 45% male, mean STS score: 4.8±3.9) with severe aortic stenosis undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). Transfemoral access was used in 69 patients (94.5%), whereas in the remainder subclavian access was used. Concomitant interventions were performed in 30% of the patients. At 30days, all-cause mortality and the rate of neurological events were both 2.7%. The rates of non-minor bleeding and major vascular complications were 8.2% and 4.1%, respectively. Clinically significant aortic regurgitation was limited to a single case (1.4%) of moderate regurgitation at discharge, which was reduced to mild at 30days. Overall pacemaker rate after TAVI was 12% and the transprosthetic gradient was 6.9±3.2mmHg.
Conclusions: TAVI using the Portico system was associated with low mortality and a low rate of neurological events at 30days and excellent hemodynamic outcome with no more than mild residual aortic regurgitation.
Keywords: Aortic regurgitation; Aortic stenosis; New-generation device; Portico; Transcatheter aortic valve implantation.
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