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Effect of TF-TAVR on Emotional Status, Quality of Life, Frailty and Inflammation

Effect of Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TF-TAVR) on Emotional Status, Quality of Life, Frailty and Inflammation and Their Interactions

Status
Terminated
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03308435
Enrollment
18
Registered
2017-10-12
Start date
2017-11-06
Completion date
2020-12-31
Last updated
2023-01-11

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Aortic Valve Stenosis, Clinical Trial, Depression, Frail Elderly Syndrome, Inflammation

Brief summary

Aortic valve stenosis (AS) shows high and increasing prevalence in Western civilizations and leads to high morbidity and mortality. 15 years ago Alain Cribier performed the first catheter-based transfemoral aortic valve replacement at the University of Rouon. This historical step initiated a dramatic shift in the treatment of AS with more than 50% of patients being treated interventionally instead of the surgical approach, today. Comorbidities are major determinants of cardiovascular events and clinical outcome in aortic valve stenosis but little is known about psychiatric comorbidities or frailty in these patients. Data from our group suggest an inflammatory trigger for depression and potentially other psychiatric diseases and aortic valve stenosis as well as aortic valve replacement are associated with considerable changes in the inflammatory state of the patients. However, no study has prospectively examined the interaction of these inflammatory markers and mood disorders, yet. In addition, frailty is a key aspect of many of TAVR patients clinically, however, scientifically there is only emerging data with half of all PubMed-indexed publications being less than 18 months old and clinical use of various scores still under discussion. The Effect of interventional aortic valve replacement on emotional status, quality of life, frailty and inflammation-study is designed to fill these gaps in evidence. It will be a prospective epidemiological cohort study to recruit 102 patients with symptomatic severe aortic valve stenosis within 18 months. All of these patients will undergo standardized cardiologic, psychiatric and frailty assessment as well as a sophisticated laboratory analysis focussing on the inflammatory state. The study aims to integrate these interdisciplinary findings to optimize patient treatment.

Detailed description

Aortic valve stenosis (AS) shows a high prevalence in Western civilizations with an increasing incidence and is associated with high morbidity and mortality. AS is a degenerative disease and therefore the main reason for the increasing prevalence is the higher proportion of elderly patients in western societies. Untreated symptomatic AS is characterized by severe morbidity with mainly dyspnea, orthopnea and reduced exercise capacity. In addition, AS has a very high mortality (50-90% in 2 years), most often due to lung edema as a result of increased afterload of the left ventricle. So far, there is no medical treatment available improving mortality in these patients. For decades, the only known therapy has been surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR), having shown a dramatic reduction in mortality. However, many of the patients suffering from AS are octogenarians or even older and also suffer from multiple comorbidities. Thus, many of these patients are considered inoperable using a surgical approach. Exactly 15 years ago Alain Cribier performed the first catheter-based transfemoral aortic valve replacement at the University of Rouon. This historical step initiated a dramatic shift in the treatment of AS with more than 50% of patients being treated interventionally instead of the surgical approach, today. Comorbidities are major determinants of cardiovascular events and clinical outcome in aortic valve stenosis but little is known about psychiatric comorbidities or frailty in these patients. Data from our group suggest an inflammatory trigger for depression and potentially other psychiatric diseases and aortic valve stenosis as well as aortic valve replacement are associated with considerable changes in the inflammatory state of the patients. However, no study has prospectively examined the interaction of these inflammatory markers and mood disorders, yet. In addition, frailty is a key aspect of many of TAVR patients clinically, however, scientifically there is only emerging data with half of all PubMed-indexed publications being less than 12 months old and clinical use of various scores still under discussion. The Effect of interventional aortic valve replacement on emotional status, quality of life, frailty and inflammation-study is designed to fill these gaps in evidence. It will be a prospective epidemiological cohort study to recruit 102 patients with symptomatic severe aortic valve stenosis within 18 months. All of these patients will undergo standardized cardiologic, psychiatric and frailty assessment as well as a sophisticated laboratory analysis focussing on the inflammatory state. The study aims to integrate these interdisciplinary findings to optimize patient treatment.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTGeriatric assessment

the assessment includes functional tests (hand grip strength, SPPB (Short Physical Performance Battery)) and questionaires Euro-QoL 5D, LUTS, GDS, ADL, iADL, dietary recall).

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTPsychiatric assessment

Psychiatric assessments includes HAMD-17 as well as Beck depression inventory, hospital anxiety and depression scale, SF36, PTSS-10

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTInflammatory assessment

analysis will include arginase, ADMA, SDMA, homoarginine, aminoacids + metabolites, tryptophan, kynurenine, kynurenine acid, cortisol, ACTH, Metanephrine, myeloperoxidase,

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTCardiological assessment

ECG, echocardiography

Sponsors

Medical University of Graz
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Symptomatic aortic valve stenosis * Planned elective transcatheter aortic valve replacement * Willingness and ability to provide signed informed consent (IC) form prior to participation in any study-related procedures

Exclusion criteria

* Disease reducing life expectancy to \< 1 year * Severe immune-system modulating or -affecting disease

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Aortic valve area6 monthsvalve area as measured calculated by doppler echocardiography

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
BDI-II6 monthsBeck depression inventory score
SF-366 monthsshort form-36 questionaire
PTSS-106 monthsPost traumatic syndrome scale-10
HAMD-17 (Hamilton)6 monthsquestionaire score
hand grip strenght test6 monthshand grip strenght test
BIA6 MonthsBioelectrical impedance analysis
kynurenine acid6 monthsinflammatory marker
Euro-QoL5D6 MonthsQuality of life questionaire

Countries

Austria

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026