A Study to Evaluate the Neuro-embolic Consequences of TAVR
Overview
Tab Title Description
Study type
ObservationalDescribes the nature of a clinical study. Types include:
- Observational study — observes people and measures outcomes without affecting results.
- Interventional study (clinical trial) — studies new tests, treatments, drugs, surgical procedures or devices.
- Medical records research — uses historical information collected from medical records of large groups of people to study how diseases progress and which treatments and surgeries work best.
Study IDs
NCT ID: NCT02073864
Sponsor Protocol Number: Neuro TAVR
About this study
A prospective, multi-center study to evaluate the neuro-embolic consequences of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR)
Participation eligibility
Participant eligibility includes age, gender, type and stage of disease, and previous treatments or health concerns. Guidelines differ from study to study, and identify who can or cannot participate. There is no guarantee that every individual who qualifies and wants to participate in a trial will be enrolled. Contact the study team to discuss study eligibility and potential participation.
Inclusion Criteria:
- The patient must be ≥18 years of age.
- Patient meets indications for TAVR procedure.
- The patient is willing to comply with protocol-specified follow-up evaluations.
- The patient, or legally authorized representative, has been informed of the nature of the study, agrees to its provisions and has provided written informed consent, approved by the appropriate Institutional Review Board (IRB) or Ethics Committee (EC).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients undergoing TAVR via the trans-axillary, subclavian, or direct aortic route
- Pregnant or nursing subjects and those who plan pregnancy in the period up to 1 year following index procedure. Female subjects of child-bearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test done within 7 days prior to index procedure per site standard test.
- Patients with known diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) within 72 hours preceding the index procedure (according to definition) or AMI >72 hours preceding the index procedure, in whom creatine kinase and creatine kinase have not returned to within normal limits at the time of procedure.
- Patients who are currently experiencing clinical symptoms consistent with new onset AMI, such as nitrate-unresponsive prolonged chest pain.
- Patients with impaired renal function (estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate [Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate] <30, calculated from serum creatinine by the Cockcroft-Gault formula).
- Patients with a platelet count of <100.000 cells/mm³ or > 700.000 cells/mm³ or a white blood cell< 3000 cells/mm³ within 7 days prior to index procedure or per standard local practice.
- Patients with a history of bleeding diathesis or coagulopathy or patients in whom anti-platelet and/or anticoagulant therapy is contraindicated, or who will refuse transfusion.
- Patients who have received any organ transplant or are on a waiting list for any organ transplant.
- Patients with known other medical illness or known history of substance abuse that may cause non-compliance with the protocol, confound the data interpretation or is associated with a life expectancy of less than one year.
- Patients with known hypersensitivity or contraindication to aspirin, heparin/bivalirudin, clopidogrel/ticlopidine, nitinol, stainless steel alloy, and/or contrast sensitivity that cannot be adequately pre-medicated.
- Patients with a history of a stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) within the prior 6 months.
- Patients with an active peptic ulcer or history of upper gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding within the prior 6 months.
- Patients presenting with cardiogenic shock.
- Patients with documented friable or mobile atherosclerotic plaque in the aortic arch.
- Patients with contraindication to cerebral MRI.
- Patients with any other cardiovascular procedure prior to TAVR
- Patients with severe aortic arch atheroma visible on CT scan
More information
Publications
Publications are currently not available