AI Article Synopsis

  • Bleeding complications are a significant concern for acute heart failure patients using mechanical circulatory support like the Impella device, with the J-PVAD registry aimed at analyzing these risks among Japanese patients.
  • The study included 1344 patients from October 2017 to January 2020, revealing a 30-day survival rate of 67% overall, with those using Impella alone showing higher survival at 81.9%.
  • Bleeding events were recorded at 6.92%, with specific rates for hematoma and bleeding from access sites at 1.41% and 4.09%, respectively, indicating that the findings align with previous reports on bleeding complications in similar patient populations.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Bleeding complication is a critical risk factor for outcomes of acute heart failure patients requiring mechanical circulatory support (MCS), including percutaneous catheter-type heart pumps (Impella). The Japanese registry for Percutaneous Ventricular Assist Device (J-PVAD) is an ongoing, large-scale, real-world registry to characterize Japanese patients requiring Impella. Here we analyzed bleeding complication profiles in patients who received Impella.

Methods: All consecutive Japanese patients who received Impella from October 2017 to January 2020 were enrolled. The 30-day survival and bleeding complications were analyzed.

Results: A total of 1344 patients were included: 653 patients received Impella alone, 685 patients received a combination of veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and Impella (ECPELLA), and 6 patients had failed Impella delivery. Overall 30-day survival was 67.0%, with Impella alone at 81.9% and ECPELLA at 52.7%. Overall bleeding/hematoma adverse events with a relation or not-excluded relation to Impella was 6.92%. Among them, the rates of hematoma and bleeding from medical device access sites were 1.41% and 4.09%, respectively. There was no difference between etiologies for these events.

Conclusion: This study represents the first 3-year survival and the safety profile focused on bleeding adverse events from the J-PVAD registry. The results show that the real-world frequency of bleeding adverse events for patients who received Impella was an expected range from previous reports, and future real-world studies should aim to expand this data set to improve outcomes and adverse events.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10047-023-01429-5DOI Listing

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