The newly updated Valve Academic Research Consortium 3 (VARC-3) definitions and endpoints proposed for transcatheter and surgical aortic valve replacement (TAVR/SAVR) research aim to add more granularity and a patient focus to a rapidly evolving field, the authors say.
Work began in 2016 to update definitions in the document to be more contemporary, as TAVR matured over the last 10 years to include younger, lower-risk patients and began moving to long-term outcomes, lead author Philippe Généreux, MD, said in an interview.
“The main change in VARC-3 is really that we tried to define not only procedural outcome, both for TAVR and aortic valve replacement performed by surgery, but also more the long-term outcomes mainly based on the patient – so quality of life, bioprosthetic valve failure, how do we define a valve failure, and also the need for rehospitalization,” he said.
However, soon after the VARC-3 document was published on April 19, 2021, in the European Heart Journal and Journal of the American College of Cardiology, surgeons took to social media to highlight the writing committee’s financial ties to industry and to suggest some definitions were shaped to favor transcatheter approaches.
“There’s no doubt that the coauthors who participated in these guidelines are experts; nobody would argue about that but what we can argue, and I’m 100% sure about, is that we have experts outside the payroll of industry who are excellent and can be part of this guideline drafting in an unbiased way,” Victor Dayan, MD, adjunct professor of cardiac surgery, National Institute of Cardiac Surgery, Montevideo, Uruguay, said in an interview.
Although the American College of Physicians recommends guideline committee members with moderate- or high-level conflicts of interest recuse themselves from authorship, he noted that one author has received more than $2 million in fees from industry in the past 4-5 years.
In all, 20 of 23 authors were involved in PARTNER, SURTAVI, and PORTICO, and several also write clinical guidelines for the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association. “So we have the same authors that are judge, jury, and attorney for these issues,” Dr. Dayan said.
In a comment, J. Rafael Sádaba, MD, PhD, interim secretary general for the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, pointed out that only three committee members are surgeons and that author disclosures took up nearly a full page of the document. “Surely they would be able to find very capable physicians with far less conflicts of interest.”
Dr. Sádaba said the question to him is why professional societies like ACC and AHA don’t define the endpoints for the clinical trials that will inform their guidelines.
“One could say these people are there because they’re good scientists, trialists, but one at least has to ask why is this happening. Why are these people setting the rules for the trials they’re running?” said Dr. Sádaba, of the Royal Navarre Hospital, Pamplona, Spain.
Dr. Généreux dismissed the Twitter comments as coming from a handful of people who engage in conspiracy theories. The VARC-3 document, he said, was created with input from 75 experts, including Food and Drug Administration officials, and the final document was reviewed by the FDA and underwent rigorous peer review prior to publication.
“The question is: do you believe there is bias when people are involved in studies driven by the industry? Well, this is where we derive our science in this field,” he said. “We are very transparent and disclose our conflicts of interest [COI].”
Commenting further, Dr. Généreux added, “this was a very well-balanced group and to imply that because we work with industry, we don’t have the best interest of the patient in mind is wrong.”
Editor in chief of the EHJ, Filippo Crea, MD, PhD, Catholic University, Rome, said in an comment that “it is not surprising that most of the authors have experience in TAVR trials. All of the authors have carefully disclosed their COIs.”
He noted that the EHJ and JACC copublished the first VARC consensus in 2011, VARC-2 1 year later, and that VARC-3 was reviewed by four external reviewers and two editors and was accepted for publication after two revisions.
Asked about a shot on social media that the EHJ had long ago “sold its soul” to be the scientific “arm” of industry, Dr. Crea said allegations need to be substantiated by facts.
“The wide adoption of VARC definitions implies that they have been well accepted by the scientific community and that they have stood the test of time,” Dr. Crea said. “EHJ has a history of publishing high-quality science. We welcome robust arguments that may challenge previously published work. Readers who perceive gaps are encouraged to provide a detailed challenge and engage with the journal.”