Cerebral Embolism During Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: The BRAVO-3 MRI Study

Eric Van Belle, Christian Hengstenberg, Thierry Lefevre, Christian Kupatt, Nicolas Debry, Oliver Husser, François Pontana, Grégory Kuchcinski, Efthymios N Deliargyris, Roxana Mehran, Debra Bernstein, Prodromos Anthopoulos, George D Dangas, BRAVO-3 MRI Study Investigators, Eric Van Belle, Christian Hengstenberg, Thierry Lefevre, Christian Kupatt, Nicolas Debry, Oliver Husser, François Pontana, Grégory Kuchcinski, Efthymios N Deliargyris, Roxana Mehran, Debra Bernstein, Prodromos Anthopoulos, George D Dangas, BRAVO-3 MRI Study Investigators

Abstract

Background: Cerebral embolization is a frequent complication after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). We hypothesized that cerebral embolization may be reduced by anticoagulation with bivalirudin during TAVR.

Objectives: This study sought to determine the proportion of patients with new cerebral embolus after TAVR and to investigate whether parenteral procedural anticoagulation strategies affect cerebral embolization.

Methods: The BRAVO (Effect of Bivalirudin on Aortic Valve Intervention Outcomes)-3 randomized trial compared bivalirudin with unfractionated heparin in patients undergoing transfemoral TAVR. A prospective cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) substudy was conducted in 4 sites; 60 patients were imaged with brain MRI after TAVR. Primary endpoint was proportion of patients with new cerebral emboli on MRI. Secondary endpoints included quantitative MRI analyses of cerebral lesions and neurological outcomes at 48 h and 30 days.

Results: Patients were randomized to bivalirudin (n = 29) versus heparin (n = 31). The proportion of patients with new cerebral emboli on MRI did not differ between bivalirudin and heparin groups (65.5% vs. 58.1%; p = 0.55). Groups were similar for median number of emboli per patient (1 [interquartile range (IQR): 0 to 3] vs. 1 [IQR: 0 to 1]; p = 0.08), total volume of emboli (45 [IQR: 0 to 175] mm(3) vs. 33 [IQR: 0 to 133] mm(3); p = 0.86), or proportion of patients with a clinical neurological deficit at 48 h or 30 days. All patients who presented clinically with stroke had evidence of new emboli on MRI.

Conclusions: This study documented cerebral embolization in nearly two-thirds of patients during contemporary TAVR. There were no significant differences in cerebral embolization for bivalirudin versus heparin anticoagulation during TAVR. (Open-Label, Randomized Trial in Patients Undergoing TAVR to Determine Safety and Efficacy of Bivalrudin vs. UFH [BRAVO-2/3]; NCT01651780).

Keywords: stenosis; stroke; valvuloplasty.

Copyright © 2016 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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