AI Article Synopsis

  • TAVR (transcatheter aortic valve replacement) has been shown to have immediate and long-term effects on coronary pressure indices, particularly fractional flow reserve (FFR) and nonhyperemic pressure ratios (NHPRs) in patients with aortic stenosis.
  • Following TAVR, FFR experienced a small but statistically significant decrease, while NHPR remained stable immediately post-procedure; long-term, FFR decreased further, and NHPR showed a nonsignificant increase, which became significant when focusing on borderline NHPR lesions.
  • The findings suggest that FFR may underestimate the importance of coronary lesions and NHPRs may overestimate them, though these changes are primarily clinically relevant in borderline cases, allowing for reliable

Article Abstract

Background: Coronary pressure indices to assess coronary artery disease are currently underused in patients with aortic stenosis due to many potential physiological effects that might hinder their interpretation. Studies with varying sample sizes have provided us with conflicting results on the effect of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) on these indices. The aim of this meta-analysis was to study immediate and long-term effects of TAVR on fractional flow reserve (FFR) and nonhyperemic pressure ratios (NHPRs).

Methods And Results: Lesion-specific coronary pressure data were extracted from 6 studies, resulting in 147 lesions for immediate change in FFR analysis and 105 for NHPR analysis. To investigate the long-term changes, 93 lesions for FFR analysis and 68 for NHPR analysis were found. Lesion data were pooled and compared with paired tests. Immediately after TAVR, FFR decreased significantly (-0.0130±0.0406 SD, : 0.0002) while NHPR remained stable (0.0003±0.0675, : 0.9675). Long-term after TAVR, FFR decreased significantly (-0.0230±0.0747, : 0.0038) while NHPR increased nonsignificantly (0.0166±0.0699, : 0.0543). When only borderline NHPR lesions were considered, this increase became significant (0.0249±0.0441, : 0.0015). Sensitivity analysis confirmed our results in borderline lesions.

Conclusions: TAVR resulted in small significant, but opposite, changes in FFR and NHPR. Using the standard cut-offs in patients with severe aortic stenosis, FFR might underestimate the physiological significance of a coronary lesion while NHPRs might overestimate its significance. The described changes only play a clinically relevant role in borderline lesions. Therefore, even in patients with aortic stenosis, an overtly positive or negative physiological assessment can be trusted.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11179829PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.124.034401DOI Listing

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