Tricuspid transcatheter edge-to-edge repair for severe tricuspid regurgitation: 1-year outcomes from the TRILUMINATE randomized cohort

J Am Coll Cardiol. 2024 Oct 23:S0735-1097(24)10054-X. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2024.10.086. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is a right-sided valvular disease independently associated with morbidity and mortality. The TRILUMINATE Pivotal trial is the first randomized, controlled trial assessing the impact of TR reduction with tricuspid transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER).

Objective: Outcomes from the full randomized cohort of the TRILUMINATE Pivotal trial have not been previously reported, and the additional enrollment may further support the safety and effectiveness of T-TEER through 1 year.

Methods: The TRILUMINATE Pivotal trial is an international RCT of T-TEER with the TriClip device in patients with symptomatic, severe TR. Adaptive trial design allowed enrollment past the primary analysis population. The primary outcome was a hierarchical composite of all-cause mortality or tricuspid valve surgery, heart failure hospitalizations (HFH), and quality-of-life improvement measured by Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) at 1 year.

Results: Between August 21, 2019 and June 29, 2022, 572 subjects were randomized, including the primary cohort (n=350) and subsequent enrollment (n=222). Subjects were elderly (78.1±7.8 years) and predominantly female (58.9%), with atrial fibrillation (87.8%) and prior HFH (23.8%). The primary endpoint was met for the full cohort (win ratio=1.84, p<0.0001). Freedom from all-cause mortality and tricuspid valve surgery through 12 months was 90.6% and 89.9% for the device and control groups, respectively (p=0.82). Annualized HFH rate was comparable between device and control subjects (0.17 vs 0.20 events/patient-year, p=0.40). A significant treatment effect was observed for change in quality of life with 49.5% of device subjects achieving a ≥15-point KCCQ score improvement (compared to 25.6% of control subjects, p<0.0001). All secondary endpoints favored T-TEER: moderate or less TR at 30 days (88.9% vs 5.3%, p<0.0001), KCCQ change at 1 year (13.0±1.4 vs -0.5±1.4 points, p<0.0001), and six-minute walk distance change at 1 year (1.7±7.5 vs -27.4±7.4 meters, p<0.0001). Freedom from major adverse events was 98.9% for T-TEER (vs. performance goal: 90%, p<0.0001).

Conclusions: TriClip was safe and effective in the full randomized cohort of TRILUMINATE Pivotal with significant TR reduction and improvements in six-minute walk distance and health status. Rates of all-cause mortality or TV surgery and HFH through 1 year were not reduced by T-TEER.

Keywords: KCCQ; TriClip; Tricuspid regurgitation; heart failure hospitalization; transcatheter edge-to-edge repair.