Conference Coverage

TAVR safe in low-risk aortic stenosis, early data indicate


 

REPORTING FROM CRT 2018


Full results from all 200 patients are expected in the fall of 2018.

Jeffrey Popma, MD, director of the interventional cardiology clinical service, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, Boston, and moderator of the session where the data were presented, called for a direct comparison with SAVR in low-risk patients to place the relative role of these options into context.

Neil Moat, a consultant cardiac surgeon at Royal Brompton & Harefield Hospital, London, agreed. Although he is also encouraged by the evidence of safety in low-risk patients, he labeled the rate of HALT in this study “a concern.”

Dr. Waksman reported financial relationships with Abbott Vascular, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Life Technologies, Med Alliance, Medtronic Vascular, and Symetis, among other companies.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Impaired kidney function no problem for dabigatran reversal
MDedge Cardiology
VIDEO: Meeting stroke screening demand will require systems’ reorganization
MDedge Cardiology
Cost-effectiveness battle: FFR vs. iFR in DEFINE-FLAIR trial
MDedge Cardiology
Endovascular interventions associated with large benefits in peripheral artery disease
MDedge Cardiology
Interventionalists skeptical about public reporting of PCI
MDedge Cardiology
CABANA: AF ablation ties drug management, with an asterisk for crossovers
MDedge Cardiology
Device-related thrombus associated with ischemic events
MDedge Cardiology
Design limitations may have compromised DVT intervention trial
MDedge Cardiology
For in-stent restenosis, everolimus-eluting stents topped drug-eluting balloons
MDedge Cardiology
Sapien M3 mitral valve replacement data reported for first 10 patients
MDedge Cardiology