A Modified Buddy-Wire Technique for Crossing of the Interatrial Septum With the Sapien 3 Valve During Transseptal Mitral Valve-in-Valve/Ring Procedures

BackgroundCrossing of the interatrial septum (IAS) with the Edwards Sapien-3 transcatheter heart valve (THV) may fail, despite preparatory balloon septostomy. A planned buddy guidewire placed in the left ventricle may help facilitate crossing of the IAS and mitral bioprosthesis with the THV. Methods...

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Published inCJC open (Online) Vol. 4; no. 10; pp. 886 - 893
Main Authors Doshi, Sagar N., Savvoulidis, Panagiotis, Mechery, Anthony, Lawton, Ewa, Ludman, Peter F., Nadir, Adnan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier 01.10.2022
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Summary:BackgroundCrossing of the interatrial septum (IAS) with the Edwards Sapien-3 transcatheter heart valve (THV) may fail, despite preparatory balloon septostomy. A planned buddy guidewire placed in the left ventricle may help facilitate crossing of the IAS and mitral bioprosthesis with the THV. MethodsA retrospective study of 12 consecutive patients undergoing transseptal, mitral valve-in-valve or valve-in-ring procedures using the Edwards Sapien-3 THV since 2018 with a planned buddy-wire technique. The primary endpoint was the composite of successful delivery of the buddy wire and deployment of the first intended Sapien 3 within the mitral valve without removal from the body, additional interatrial septal puncture, or placement of a further buddy wire. Secondary objectives included safety endpoints, as follows: access-site bleeding, tamponade, stroke, intraprocedural death, sustained ventricular arrhythmia, and 30-day vascular complications. ResultsFrom January 2018 to March 2022, a total of 12 consecutive patients who underwent transseptal mitral valve-in-valve (9) or valve-in-ring (3) procedures were identified. Three patients (25%) required repeat septostomy on the buddy wire after initial THV crossing failure. Crossing of the IAS and successful deployment in the mitral valve with the THV was achieved in all cases, without removal from the body or need for an additional wire or septal puncture. No access-site bleeding, stroke, tamponade, ventricular arrhythmia, intraprocedural death, or 30-day vascular complication occurred. ConclusionsThe planned buddy-wire technique was successful in all cases and facilitated successful crossing of the IAS and deployment of the THV in the mitral position without removal from the body, additional wires, or septal punctures, with no adverse events.
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ISSN:2589-790X
2589-790X
DOI:10.1016/j.cjco.2022.07.006