Clinical and Geriatric Assessment in Elderly Patients Before and After TAVI or MitraClip Positioning
NCT ID: NCT03145376
Last Updated: 2017-10-30
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
100 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2017-06-01
2020-10-30
Brief Summary
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The specialists taking part to Heart Team are: a cardiologist, a heart surgeon, a vascular surgeon, an anesthesiologist and a geriatrician.
The Geriatrician is called to make a careful multidimensional assessment of the elderly patients who have been suggested for the interventions mentioned above. His role is to assess the degree of co-morbidity and polypathology, autonomy in the common activities of daily living, nutritional status, cognitive status and quality of life. Following this evaluation, together with the other components of Heart Team, it is expressed a collective judgment on the patient's eligibility to these interventions. So, the aim of the present study is to identify changes in the degree of cognitive decline, of autonomy in carrying out activities of daily living, quality of life, nutritional status, pre- and postoperatively (6 months after the procedure) polypathology degree in elderly patients to be undergone or undergoing TAVI or positioning MitraClip because suffering from aortic valvular stenosis or severe mitral insufficiency. The patients undergo to a battery of tests, to a 5 minutes electrocardiographic record to evaluate the Heart Rate Variability (HRV) and to a complete echocardiographic evaluation.
Detailed Description
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After the "first man" made in 2002, TAVI has been introduced in the clinic in 2007 and has quickly gained critical acclaim. Up to now, about 150,000 TAVI procedures were performed with a growing trend.
The methodical approach of the techniques involve various approaches: transfemoral, transapical, (the two most popular), transaxillary, transaortic.
The enormous diffusion of the method follows the growing demand. Conservative treatment of the SA guarantees any improvement; optimized drugs therapy is able nor to mitigate the symptomatology associated nor to resolve the underlying disease.
The surgery requires the use of extracorporeal circulation and, although conducted in the less invasive way possible, it remains an intervention in which elderly patients with polypathology and high degree of comorbidity are hardly addressed.
A clinical evaluation and multidimensional geriatric assessment are indispensable to ensure a correct diagnosis of the patient, estimating the risk of periprocedural mortality and morbidity and evaluate the actual possibility of intervention benefit on the patient's overall health.
MitraClip
The severe mitral regurgitation is a clear indication to intervention of mitral repair which has advantages compared to traditional surgery, preserving the contractile function of the left ventricle, reducing the incidence of adverse events related to the system of the prosthesis, by reducing the hospital mortality, morbidity and hospitalization, improving the long-term survival. The surgical risk of mitral plastic surgery presents a percentage lower than 2.5% in the centers that perform no less than 140 operations per year. However, an ejection fraction (FE) of the left ventricle lower than 55% is a negative prognostic index. In addition, the mitral plastic surgery has a long and difficult learning curves, but also the indisputable advantage of less invasiveness than traditional surgery, which allows its use even in patients deemed to be at higher operative risk. The placement of a MitraClip is the evolution of conventional surgery (Alfieri's speech): percutaneous, trans-septal puncture, placing clips on the mitral leaflets to create a dual orifice and therefore decrease or completely abolish the valve insufficiency . The EVEREST II study has shown that this procedure is less effective than surgery in reducing the degree of mitral regurgitation, but the percutaneous repair of mitral regurgitation is more secure and has shown improved clinical outcomes, comparable to cardiac surgery. At a post-hoc analysis, patients who benefit most from the MitraClip patients are elderly with low ejection fraction and functional mitral insufficiency. Considering that the prevalence of mitral insufficiency in the elderly is 30-50%, it is comprehensible how the MitraClip will have certain evolution in numerical terms.
The MitraClip is, therefore, a valid therapeutic option in case of functional mitral regurgitation, since the surgery in these patients is burdened with high mortality, by high recurrence of mitral regurgitation and a long hospital stay.
The MitraClip is to be used in a small number of properly selected patients. The procedural success depends on the ability to choose an individualized therapy for each patient depending on valvular anatomy, valve functionality, on comorbidities and on patient's life expectation, performing an estimation of the risk-benefit of the two percutaneous techniques and surgical intervention.
This estimate and evaluation of the patient must be operated in the geriatric multidisciplinary field, to ensure a comprehensive risk assessment of patients and their best selection.
Aim of the study
Identify changes in the degree of cognitive decline, of autonomy in carrying out activities of daily living, quality of life, nutritional status, pre- and postoperatively (6 months after the procedure) polypathology degree in elderly patients to be undergone or undergoing TAVI or positioning MitraClip because suffering from aortic valvular stenosis or severe mitral insufficiency. The patients undergo to a battery of tests, to a 5 minutes electrocardiographic record to evaluate the Heart Rate Variability (HRV) and to a complete echocardiographic evaluation.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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patients before and after TAVI/MitraClip
geriatric assessment of patients before and after TAVI/Mitraclip
geriatric assessment
1. Clinical evaluation and geriatric assessment with:
1. CIRS: CIRS (Cumulative Illness Rating Scale)
2. ADL (Activities of Daily Living);
3. IADL (InstrumentalActivities of Daily Living);
4. Mini Nutritional Assessment;
5. Evaluation of quality of life (Short Form 36, SF-36).
2. Making a traditional 12-lead ECG.
3. A single lead electrocardiographic registration (DI, D II and D III) of 5 minutes baseline and 5 minutes with controlled breathing (15 breaths / min), using the Spectralink 2011 program, which allows us to identify and calculate the variables object of study;
4. transthoracic echocardiogram.
Interventions
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geriatric assessment
1. Clinical evaluation and geriatric assessment with:
1. CIRS: CIRS (Cumulative Illness Rating Scale)
2. ADL (Activities of Daily Living);
3. IADL (InstrumentalActivities of Daily Living);
4. Mini Nutritional Assessment;
5. Evaluation of quality of life (Short Form 36, SF-36).
2. Making a traditional 12-lead ECG.
3. A single lead electrocardiographic registration (DI, D II and D III) of 5 minutes baseline and 5 minutes with controlled breathing (15 breaths / min), using the Spectralink 2011 program, which allows us to identify and calculate the variables object of study;
4. transthoracic echocardiogram.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* the capacity to perform geriatric assessment tests;
* sinus rhythm at the time of evaluation (for the evaluation of HRV only);
* to sign appropriate informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
* hemodynamically unstable patient;
* Inability or unwillingness to sign informed consent.
65 Years
90 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Roma La Sapienza
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Gianfranco Piccirillo
associate professor
Principal Investigators
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Gianfranco Piccirillo, MD, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Sapienza
Locations
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Gianfranco Piccirillo
Rome, , Italy
Policlinico Umberto I
Rome, , Italy
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Federica Moscucci, MD
Role: primary
Federica Moscucci, MD
Role: primary
GIANFRANCO PICCIRILLO, MD, PhD
Role: backup
References
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Piccirillo G, Moscucci F, Mastropietri F, Di Iorio C, Mariani MV, Fabietti M, Stricchiola GM, Parrotta I, Sardella G, Mancone M, Magri D. Possible predictive role of electrical risk score on transcatheter aortic valve replacement outcomes in older patients: preliminary data. Clin Interv Aging. 2018 Sep 11;13:1657-1667. doi: 10.2147/CIA.S170226. eCollection 2018.
Other Identifiers
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TaMi01
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id