I know we had a post in this section from 2017, but this news from the NIH seems even brighter.
I should have another 5 years at least with my 6 year old Epic. By the time I get my bioprosthetic replaced, I imagine low-risk/asymtpomatic TAVR patients will be common. Now I had a blimp of an aortic aneurysm, so I needed a sternotomy in any case. But in the future, the thought of having an a new valve implanted intravenously with "conscious sedation" blows my mind! I don't go around worry or moping about it, but this is the first time I've felt truly positive about the future prospects of my AVR. Hopefully, it's warranted and you can rejoice a bit too.
I should have another 5 years at least with my 6 year old Epic. By the time I get my bioprosthetic replaced, I imagine low-risk/asymtpomatic TAVR patients will be common. Now I had a blimp of an aortic aneurysm, so I needed a sternotomy in any case. But in the future, the thought of having an a new valve implanted intravenously with "conscious sedation" blows my mind! I don't go around worry or moping about it, but this is the first time I've felt truly positive about the future prospects of my AVR. Hopefully, it's warranted and you can rejoice a bit too.
In the 16 years since the first pioneering procedure, transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has come of age and become a routine strategy for aortic valve replacement, increasingly performed under conscious sedation via transfemoral access. Simplification of the procedure, accumulation of clinical experience, and improvements in valve design and delivery systems have led to a dramatic reduction in complication rates. These advances have allowed transition to lower risk populations, and outcome data from the PARTNER 2A and SURTAVI trials have established a clear evidence base for use in intermediate risk patients. Ongoing studies with an expanding portfolio of devices seem destined to expand indications for TAVI towards lower risk, younger and asymptomatic populations. In this article, we outline recent advances, new devices and current guidelines informing the use of TAVI, and describe remaining uncertainties that need to be addressed.
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