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Aortic Valve Replacement Versus Conservative Treatment in Asymptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis (AVATAR)

C

Clinical Centre of Serbia

Status

Completed

Conditions

Aortic Stenosis

Treatments

Procedure: surgical aortic valve replacement

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02436655
FWA00011929

Details and patient eligibility

About

Whether to intervene in asymptomatic patients with severe aortic stenosis and normal left ventricular ejection fraction remains controversial. The investigators therefore try to compare clinical outcomes of elective aortic valve replacement to conventional treatment and watchful waiting strategy in a prospective randomized trial.

Full description

Aortic valve replacement (AVR) therapy is obvious choice in symptomatic severe aortic stenosis (AS) patients, because it improves symptoms, LV function and survival. Therefore, the accurate diagnosis of the disease, determination of its severity and precise evaluation of patients' clinical status is essential. However, the treatment decisions and indication for AVR in asymptomatic patients with severe AS and normal left ventricular ejection fraction (LV EF) are vague and the subject of ongoing debate. The most recent European and American guidelines have class I indication for AVR in asymptomatic severe AS patients with normal LV EF only in patients already scheduled for other cardiac surgery (for example by-pass surgery). In the case of symptom positive stress test American and European guideline differs, with European guidelines having class I indication and American guidelines only IIb indication. In all those cases of asymptomatic severe AS patients with normal LV EF the level of evidence is C, in other words there are no randomized trials. The consequence is that the decisions are made individually, patient by patient, and for this reason a patient with identical echocardiographic/clinical characteristics might be operated in USA but not in Europe (or any other part in the world), and vice-versa.

With the experience that has accumulated so far, there are retrospective and observational data that elective AVR might lead to favorable outcome compared to late (after symptom onset) surgery. This may especially come to attention with the understanding that annual risk of sudden cardiac death in asymptomatic severe AS patients with normal LV EF might be very similar or even a bit higher than operative mortality in experienced cardiac surgery centers.

Nevertheless, the majority of cardiologist worldwide are reluctant to send their asymptomatic patient with isolated severe AS and normal LV EF to AVR, and it will probably stay like that till randomized trials give us an answer whether elective AVR is beneficial.

Enrollment

157 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • men and women of any ethnic origin aged ≥18 years
  • Written informed consent
  • V max across the aortic valve > 4m/s or Pmean ≥ 40mmHg and AVA ≤ 1cm2 or AVAi ≤ 0.6cm2/m2 at rest
  • Without reported symptoms
  • Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) score < 8%

Exclusion criteria

  • Participation in another clinical trial within 30 days prior randomization

  • Pregnant or nursing women

  • Mental condition rendering the patient unable to understand the nature, scope and possible consequences of the study or to follow the protocol

  • Positive stress-test defined as:

    1. Anginal chest pain during testing
    2. Syncope, dizziness during testing
    3. Decrease in systolic blood pressure during exercise ≥ 20mmHg
    4. Malignant arrhythmia during exercise testing (VT or VF)
  • Left ventricular ejection fraction < 50% at rest

  • Very severe AS (defined as Vmax > 5.5 m/s at rest)

  • Significant disease of other valves (Mitral stenosis with Pmean > 5mg, or any significant regurgitation ≥ 3+

  • Recent AMI (< 1 year)

  • Need for additional by-pass surgery or for aortic root replacement (i.e Bentall) or ascending aorta in asymptomatic patients undergoing AVR

  • Previous by-pass surgery

  • Previous any heart valve surgery

  • Impaired renal function, i.e. creatinine >200 µmol/L or glomerular filtration rate < 30 mL/min/1.73 m2

  • Significant pulmonary hypertension at rest (PASP > 50mmHg)

  • Uncontrolled hypertension at rest (systolic >180 mmHg and diastolic >100 mmHg)

  • Significant co-morbidity with reduced life expectance (< 3 years)

  • Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus (HbA1C > 9 %)

  • Significant COPD (FEV1 < 70% of predicted value)

  • Permanent or paroxysmal atrial fibrillation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

157 participants in 2 patient groups

conventional drug treatment
No Intervention group
Description:
conservative treatment and watchful waiting till symptom onset (then aortic valve replacement). Other indications for aortic valve replacement include reduced left ventricular systolic function
elective aortic valve replacement
Active Comparator group
Description:
elective aortic valve surgery (replacement) within 4 weeks after randomization
Treatment:
Procedure: surgical aortic valve replacement

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

14

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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