# Safety and Feasibility of Transcatheter Edge-to-Edge Repair of Mitral Regurgitation in Cardiac Amyloidosis

**Authors:** Julia Vogel, Peter Luedike, Katharina Hellhammer, Stephan Settelmeier, Sophia Jura, Florian Buehning, Tobias Lerchner, Thomas Mondritzki, Alexander Carpinteiro, H. Christian Reinhardt, Florian Schindhelm, Amir Abbas Mahabadi, Tienush Rassaf, Lars Michel

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.101998 · 2025-07-17

## TL;DR

This study shows that a minimally invasive heart repair procedure is safe and effective for patients with cardiac amyloidosis and severe heart leakage.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the safety and feasibility of TEER in cardiac amyloidosis patients with severe mitral regurgitation.

## Key findings

- TEER was successful in 100% of patients with cardiac amyloidosis and severe MR.
- Symptoms improved in both cardiac amyloidosis and heart failure groups after TEER.
- No major adverse events occurred, with 100% 30-day survival in both groups.

## Abstract

Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is characterized by amyloid deposits in the heart leading to various manifestations including heart failure (HF). CA patients often present with severe mitral regurgitation (MR), complicating management in patients. Transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) offers an interventional option for patients at high surgical risk.

The objective of this study was to assess the safety, efficacy, and clinical outcomes of TEER in patients with CA and severe MR.

This retrospective study included 27 patients with CA and 81 matched patients with HF without CA and severe MR who underwent TEER. Outcome parameters included technical success, echocardiographic response, laboratory biomarkers, and clinical symptom burden. Follow-up was performed at a median of 103 days (90-144) and included clinical assessment, echocardiography, and laboratory analysis.

Patients had a median age of 79 (75-83) years with 86.1% male and NYHA functional class ≥III in 85.1% prior to intervention. TEER was successful in 100% in both groups. Symptom burden improved in both groups (NYHA functional class I/II in 50.5% vs 57.8%, CA vs HF). MR was reduced, achieving MR ≤2+ in 100%, with a reduction in regurgitant volume in both groups (P < 0.001). No procedure-related major adverse events were reported with a 100% 30-day survival rate. Scoring for MR anatomical complexity did not show a difference.

The study demonstrated safety and feasibility of TEER in patients with CA and severe MR, with satisfactory procedure-related outcome and absence of severe adverse events, thus highlighting the potential benefits in CA patients.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** heart failure (MONDO:0005252)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** amyloid (MESH:C000718787), MR (MESH:D008944), CA (MESH:D000686), HF (MESH:D006333)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12284670/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12284670