Journalartikel

Galectin-3 and ST2 as predictors of therapeutic success in high-risk patients undergoing percutaneous mitral valve repair (MitraClip)


AutorenlisteDoerr, Oliver; Walther, Claudia; Liebetrau, Christoph; Keller, Till; Sommer, Thomas; Boeder, Niklas; Bayer, Matthias; Bauer, Pascal; Moellmann, Helge; Gaede, Luise; Troidl, Christian; Voss, Sandra; Bauer, Timm; Hamm, Christian W.; Nef, Holger

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2018

Seiten1164-1169

ZeitschriftClinical Cardiology

Bandnummer41

Heftnummer9

ISSN0160-9289

eISSN1932-8737

Open Access StatusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/clc.22996

VerlagWiley


Abstract

Background: Percutaneous mitral valve repair (PMVR) is an interventional treatment option in patients with severe mitral regurgitation (MR) and at high risk for open-heart surgery. Currently, limited information exists about predictors of procedural success after PMVR. Galectin-3 (Gal-3) and suppression of tumorigenicity 2 (ST2) induce fibrotic alterations in severe MR and heart failure. We sought to examine the predictive value of Gal-3 and ST2 as specific indicators of therapeutic success in high-risk patients undergoing PMVR.

Hypothesis: We hypothesize that extended cardiac fibrotic alterations might have impact on successful MR reduction after the MitraClip procedure.

Methods: A total of 210 consecutive patients undergoing PMVR using the MitraClip system were included in this study. Procedural success was defined as an immediate reduction of MR by >= 2 grades, assessed by echocardiography. Venous blood samples were collected prior to PMVR and at 6 months follow-up for biomarker analysis.

Results: After PMVR there was a significant reduction in the severity of MR (MR grade: 3 +/- 0.3 vs 1.6 +/- 0.6, P <0.001). Low baseline Gal-3 levels (PMVRsuccess: 22.0 ng/mL [IQR, 17.3-30.9] vs PMVRfailure: 30.6 ng/mL [IQR, 24.8-42.3], P <0.001) and ST2 levels (PMVRsuccess: 900.0 pg/mL [IQR, 619.5-1114.5] vs PMVRfailure: 1728.0 pg/mL [IQR, 1051.March 1, 1930], P < 0.001) were associated with successful MR reduction after PMVR. Also, ROC analysis identified low baseline Gal-3 and ST2 levels as predictors of therapeutic success after PMVR (AUC(Gal-3):0.721 [IQR, 0.64-0.803], P < 0.001; AUC(ST2): 0.807 [IQR, 0.741-0.872], P < 0.001).

Conclusions: There was an association between low Gal-3 and ST2 plasma levels and successful MR reduction in patients with severe MR undergoing PMVR using the MitraClip system.




Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilDoerr, O., Walther, C., Liebetrau, C., Keller, T., Sommer, T., Boeder, N., et al. (2018) Galectin-3 and ST2 as predictors of therapeutic success in high-risk patients undergoing percutaneous mitral valve repair (MitraClip), Clinical Cardiology, 41(9), pp. 1164-1169. https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.22996

APA-ZitierstilDoerr, O., Walther, C., Liebetrau, C., Keller, T., Sommer, T., Boeder, N., Bayer, M., Bauer, P., Moellmann, H., Gaede, L., Troidl, C., Voss, S., Bauer, T., Hamm, C., & Nef, H. (2018). Galectin-3 and ST2 as predictors of therapeutic success in high-risk patients undergoing percutaneous mitral valve repair (MitraClip). Clinical Cardiology. 41(9), 1164-1169. https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.22996



Schlagwörter


Cardiac fibrosisDEATHHEART-FAILUREMitraClipmitral regurgitationPercutaneous Mitral Valve RepairREGURGITATIONSERUMSOLUBLE ST2


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