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Background:
Tricuspid valve regurgitation is a disease where one of the heart valves leaks. The leak affects blood flow. People with this disease may feel breathless and lack energy; they may need to stay in the hospital when fluid builds up in the body. The tricuspid is the most difficult valve to repair with surgery. Researchers want to try a new procedure called trans-atrial intra-pericardial tricuspid annuloplasty (TRAIPTA).
Objective:
To test TRAIPTA in people with tricuspid valve regurgitation.
Eligibility:
Adults aged 21 years and over with tricuspid valve regurgitation. They must not be eligible for standard surgical repair.
Design:
Participants will be screened. They will have tests of their heart function; these will include blood tests, imaging scans, and a 6-minute walking test.
Participants will enter the hospital for at least 1 day. The TRAIPTA procedure will be done under sedation or general anesthesia. The TRAIPTA study device is a loop that will be placed around the heart like a belt. It acts like a lasso to reduce leakage of the heart valve. Doctors will put the device in place by inserting a wire through a vein in the leg; they will thread the device up to the heart through the vein. The wire will be removed, but the TRAIPTA device will remain in place.
Participants will have follow-up visits 4 times in 1 year after the procedure. These visits will include physical exams, blood tests, imaging scans, and other tests of heart function.
Researchers will contact participants or their doctors for heart test results for another 4 years....
Full description
Study Description:
Functional tricuspid valve regurgitation is common, has high morbidity and mortality, and has no good treatments. We developed a new transcatheter treatment for this orphan disease called TRAIPTA (Trans-Atrial Intra-Pericardial Tricuspid Annuloplasty). In TRAIPTA, catheter tools cross the wall of the heart to enter the pericardial space surrounding the heart, encircle the heart around the atrioventricular groove, and apply tension to reshape and narrow the heart to help the leaky tricuspid valve to function better. After placing the belt, a closure device is deployed to close the puncture in the right atrial appendage.
This is the first human test of the TRAIPTA technique. It is offered to patients who are suffering from clinically significant tricuspid valve regurgitation and who have no other good treatment options.
Objectives:
The objectives of this study are to test whether TRAIPTA is feasible, safe, favorably remodels tricuspid annular geometry, and reduces severity of functional tricuspid valve regurgitation.
Primary Safety Endpoint:
The primary endpoint is safety, measured as a composite of freedom from major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) assessed at 30 days after the TRAIPTA procedure, including all of the following:
Secondary (Performance) Endpoints:
The performance endpoints are secondary, and are assessed at the timepoints indicated.
Technical success (measured at exit from cath lab). All the following must be present:
Device success (measured at 30 days). All of the following must be present:
Absence of procedural mortality or stroke; and
Proper placement and positioning of the TRAIPTA annuloplasty belt; and
Freedom from unplanned surgical or interventional procedures related to the device or access procedure; and
Safety of the TRAIPTA annuloplasty belt, including:
Reduction of TR by at least one degree without significant tricuspid valve stenosis.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Robert J Lederman, M.D.; Annette M Stine, R.N.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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