Aligning Prosthetic Valves to Native Commissures: The Secret to Coronary Artery Obstruction?

Preventing coronary artery obstruction during transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) continues to be a challenge. There are techniques to prevent (or at least reduce) this from happening, which could be catastrophic. However, they all somehow fall into palliative care, that is, they will merely provide relief, rather than a cure. 

obstruccion coronaria

Commissure overlapping and the resulting obstruction can easily become just another tense moment, when prevented, or turn out a complete desperate move when it takes us by surprise. And later there might be another problem: future access to coronary arteries. 

This study, soon to be published in J Am Coll Cardiol Intv, seeks to improve alignment of transcatheter aortic-valve neo-commissures to native valves.

Controlling Sapien 3 transcatheter heart valve deployment orientation had no great impact on commissural alignment, though there was some improvement with the self-expandable valves (CoreValve Evolut and Acurate Neo). 

This issue became relevant after expanding the procedure onto a new low-risk population who, in addition to running the risk of coronary artery stenosis, might eventually need an intervention or a second valve.


Read also: Myocardial Fibrosis in Severe Aortic Stenosis: A Matter of Sex?


Surgery has a great advantage when it comes to leaflet alignment, since the original leaflets are removed, and the prosthesis is securely anchored to the native commissures. 

The study included 828 patients undergoing TAVR in 5 centers where they tried rotating the hat marker on the Evolute valve and ACURATE-neo commissural post, and crimping the Sapien 3 at specific orientations to improve commissure alignment. 

All Sapien 3 efforts resulted in an overlapping position with at least one of the native commissures 51.3% of times (basically a coin toss).


Read also: Cardiovascular Sequelae Associated with COVID-19.


Evolut or Acurate alignment was far from ideal, but at least saw an improvement when changing orientation, compared against the conventional technique. 

Original Title: Alignment of transcatheter aortic-valve neo-commissures (ALIGN TAVR): impact of final valve orientation and coronary overlap.

Reference: Tang GHL et al. J Am Coll Cardiol Intv. 2020; Epub ahead of print. 


Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Get the latest scientific articles on interventional cardiology

We are interested in your opinion. Please, leave your comments, thoughts, questions, etc., below. They will be most welcome.

More articles by this author

Embolization of Left Atrial Appendage Closure Devices: Predictors, Prevention, and Management Strategies

Atrial fibrillation is associated with an increased risk of stroke and, in patients with contraindications to anticoagulation, percutaneous left atrial appendage closure represents an...

Coronary revascularization before TAVI: prior PCI or conservative management?

The coexistence of coronary artery disease (CAD) in patients with severe aortic stenosis undergoing TAVI is common, with a reported prevalence ranging from 30%...

Percutaneous Mechanical Aspiration versus Surgical Treatment of Tricuspid Valve Endocarditis

Tricuspid valve infective endocarditis (TVIE) accounts for approximately 5% to 10% of all cases of infective endocarditis. Surgical treatment remains the standard therapy in...

CRT 2026 | TAVI-CLOSE Trial: Dual Suture vs Suture + Plug for Vascular Closure After Transfemoral TAVI

The transfemoral approach is the predominant strategy for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). Although vascular complications are currently less frequent, they remain relevant determinants...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related Articles

SOLACI Sessionsspot_img

Recent Articles

ACVC 2026 | CELEBRATE Trial: Prehospital Zalunfiban Use in STEMI

Optimizing antithrombotic therapy in the prehospital phase of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) remains challenging due to the delayed onset of action of P2Y12...

ACVC 2026 | BOX Substudy: Mean Arterial Pressure Targets in Cardiogenic Shock After OHCA

Hemodynamic management of cardiogenic shock following ischemic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA-AMICS) remains an unresolved issue, particularly regarding optimal mean arterial pressure (MAP) targets and...

ACVC 2026 | FLASH Registry European Cohort: Mechanical Thrombectomy in Pulmonary Embolism

The management of intermediate-high and high-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) remains an area of therapeutic uncertainty, particularly in patients with right ventricular (RV) dysfunction, in...