38 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
The purpose of this study is to determine the utility of tricuspid valve repair at the time of LVAD implantation for patients presenting with moderate or severe tricuspid regurgitation. The study will be a randomized trial for patients presenting for LVAD implantation to either tricuspid valve repair or no tricuspid valve repair. The data will be analyzed as both an intention to treat analysis as well as an "as treated" analysis with the primary outcome being rates of right ventricular dysfunction post LVAD implantation. Tricuspid valve repair for these patient is currently being done for some patients, without any strong data to either support such practice or negate it.
Prospective, multi-center study to assess safety and performance of the inQB8 MonarQ Tricuspid Valve Replacement System.
Prospective, multi-center study to assess safety and performance of the TRiCares Topaz Tricuspid Valve Replacement System
The purpose of this study is to understand the clinical impact of non-surgical and surgical treatment in atrial fibrillation induced tricuspid regurgitation (AFTR).
Pivotal trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Edwards EVOQUE tricuspid valve replacement system
Prospective, multi-center study to assess safety and performance of the Edwards EVOQUE Tricuspid Valve Replacement System
The study is a multi-center, prospective, early feasibility study to measure individual patient clinical outcomes and effectiveness, evaluate the safety and function, provide guidance for future clinical study designs and development efforts of the Edwards FORMA Tricuspid Transcatheter Repair System.
The purpose of this study is to gather clinical information on the hemodynamic performance of the Contour 3D® and Tri-Ad® Tricuspid Annuloplasty Rings in a post-market environment.
The purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate mitral (left atrioventricular valve) and tricuspid (right atrioventricular valve (AVV)) regurgitation using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) as the non-invasive "gold standard" compared to transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) to evaluate measurements of the width of the regurgitation jet (vena contracta (VC)) to demonstrate the utility of the VC as a means to objectively evaluate atrioventricular valve regurgitation. In addition, feasibility and other quantitative and qualitative measures of regurgitation will be compared between CMR and TTE. * Hypothesis 1: The ability to objectively evaluate atrioventricular valve regurgitation and VC width with TTE and CMR has a high feasibility rate with acceptable intra and inter-observer variability by two independent readers. * Hypothesis 2: There will be positive correlation between the TTE measurement of the VC width and quantitative assessment of atrioventricular valve regurgitation by TTE and CMR. * Hypothesis 3: There will be a positive correlation between the quantitative measurements of atrioventricular valve regurgitation by phase contrast velocity encoded CMR with quantitative values as measured by TTE. * Hypothesis 4: There will be a positive correlation between qualitative assessment of atrioventricular valve regurgitation by CMR compared to TTE.
Background: Treatments for structural heart and valve disease are quickly changing. But treatment could be improved. Researchers want to gather data from people with this disease. They want to find problems and seek new ways to make treatments better. Objective: To find people with structural heart and valve disease with common features to study. To find flaws and patterns in procedures related to this disease. To share findings with other researchers. Eligibility: People ages 18 and older who are receiving care from the structural heart and valve program at the participating NHLBI structural heart disease network sites that are part of the study Design: Participants will be screened with their consent. This will occur when they give their standard consent for medical care. Participants will have their data collected in the course of standard medical care. Data include: Demographic data Protected health data Personally identifiable data Medical records Medical images. These could include X-rays, CT scans, and MRI scans. The study could find something that would impact participants care. If this is the case, their doctors will be told. Participants data may be shared with other researchers. ...
The mitral valve is the inflow valve into the main pumping chamber of the heart. It can become leaky or narrow, and cause blood to back up into the blood vessels of the lungs. When patients get symptoms from a leaky or narrow mitral valve, surgery is recommended to either fix or replace the valve. Many patients with mitral valve disease also develop a leaky tricuspid valve - the tricuspid valve is the inflow valve to the right side of the heart (the right heart pumps blood across the lungs). The amount of leakiness of the tricuspid valve is determined by an ultrasound test, and the amount of leakiness is graded as: none, mild, moderate, or severe. When a heart surgeon operates on a patient with a diseased mitral valve, he or she will fix the tricuspid valve if the tricuspid leakage is severe. This involves sewing a cloth-covered ring around the valve and narrowing it. If the tricuspid valve leakage is only mild (or absent), the surgeon will leave the tricuspid valve alone at the time of mitral valve surgery. If the tricuspid valve has moderate leakage surgeons are uncertain about what to do. In a recent review of thousands of patients across the nation having mitral valve surgery with moderately leaky tricuspid valves, 35 % of patients had tricuspid valve repair. Since the investigators don't know what the best approach is: to leave the moderately leaky tricuspid valve alone or to fix it with a cloth-covered ring, the investigators propose a study to determine which approach is best. Patients having mitral valve surgery with a moderately leaky tricuspid valve will be randomized to either 1. have a tricuspid valve repair or 2. to not have a tricuspid valve repair. The investigators will carefully follow these patients for two years and see if heart function is better among those who got their valve fixed.
Background: Tricuspid valve regurgitation is a disease where one of the heart valves leaks. The leak affects blood flow. People with this disease may feel breathless and lack energy; they may need to stay in the hospital when fluid builds up in the body. The tricuspid is the most difficult valve to repair with surgery. Researchers want to try a new procedure called trans-atrial intra-pericardial tricuspid annuloplasty (TRAIPTA). Objective: To test TRAIPTA in people with tricuspid valve regurgitation. Eligibility: Adults aged 21 years and over with tricuspid valve regurgitation. They must not be eligible for standard surgical repair. Design: Participants will be screened. They will have tests of their heart function; these will include blood tests, imaging scans, and a 6-minute walking test. Participants will enter the hospital for at least 1 day. The TRAIPTA procedure will be done under sedation or general anesthesia. The TRAIPTA study device is a loop that will be placed around the heart like a belt. It acts like a lasso to reduce leakage of the heart valve. Doctors will put the device in place by inserting a wire through a vein in the leg; they will thread the device up to the heart through the vein. The wire will be removed, but the TRAIPTA device will remain in place. Participants will have follow-up visits 4 times in 1 year after the procedure. These visits will include physical exams, blood tests, imaging scans, and other tests of heart function. Researchers will contact participants or their doctors for heart test results for another 4 years....
The goal of this pivotal study is to demonstrate the safety and performance of the Cor TRICUSPID ECM (extracellular matrix) Valve (or Cor PEDIATRIC Tricuspid ECM Valve) for the surgical management of tricuspid valve disease and dysfunction in adult and pediatric patients. The main question(s) it aims to answer are: * whether the device may be implanted successfully and safely, and * whether the device effectively treats tricuspid valve disease and dysfunction through 12 months Participants will undergo: * preoperative evaluation * tricuspid valve replacement with the Cor TRICUSPID ECM Valve * postoperative evaluation, including at hospital discharge, 30 days, 6 months, and 12 months, and then annually thereafter through 5 years
The purpose of the research is to determine whether repairing a tricuspid valve (TV) in patients with mild to moderate tricuspid regurgitation (TR), at the time of planned mitral valve surgery (MVS), would improve the heart health of those who receive it compared to those who do not. At this point, the medical community is split in their opinion on whether surgeons should routinely repair mild to moderate TR in patients who are undergoing planned mitral valve surgery, and this study will answer this question.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the analgesic efficacy and safety of wound infiltration with liposomal bupivacaine (LB) in patients undergoing cardiac surgery with sternotomy and cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and compare it with bupivacaine hydrochloride infiltration
TTVR-AHI is a multicenter, retrospective registry including heart failure patients displaying a severe and symptomatic tricuspid regurgitation (TR), deemed non-eligible to cardiac surgery and therefore treated with transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement (TTVR) devices. This substudy of the main registry will focus on those with post-procedural acute hemodynamic instability (AHI).
The LuX-Valve Plus System is intended for the treatment of patients with at least severe TR who are symptomatic and determined by a Heart Team not to be suitable for surgical treatment. This study aims to assess the safety and effectiveness of the LuX-Valve Plus System in high-surgical risk patients with at least severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR).
The Investigational Device is the TricValve Transcatheter Bicaval Valve System (also referred to as the TricValve System). The bioprosthesis is available in two different diameters for each model (SVC and IVC) specifically designed to adapt to the anatomic features of the superior vena cava (SVC) and inferior vena cava (IVC). The SVC and IVC valves are single use, sterile devices provided in two sizes each, for a total of four valve sizes. The valves are designed for heterotopic caval implantation without perturbing the native tricuspid valve. The valves are made of bovine pericardium leaflets sutured on a nitinol self-expanding stent system. The SVC and IVC valves are provided pre-mounted in two separate TricValve Delivery Systems, and are individually packaged into two separate boxes, provided sterile and ready to use. The two TricValve Delivery Systems deliver the two valves percutaneously into the SVC and IVC via femoral vein access using a transvenous approach.
The objective of the study is to assess the safety and technical feasibility of the Laplace Transcatheter Tricuspid Valve Replacement (TTVR) System
The TricValve® Transcatheter Bicaval Valve System is a bicaval transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement system, which includes the TricValve® Transcatheter Bicaval Valve for superior vena cava (SVC) and the TricValve® Transcatheter Bicaval Valve for inferior vena cava (IVC). The TricValve® Transcatheter Bicaval Valves are pre-mounted into the TricValve® Delivery System which is used for percutaneous access and delivery of the TricValve® Transcatheter Bicaval Valve in the vena cava. The system is a single use, sterile device compatible with all the valve sizes. The prostheses are implanted percutaneously into the inferior and superior vena cava without disturbing the native tricuspid valve. The device is made of bovine pericardium leaflets sutured on a nitinol self-expanding stent system.
The field of transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement (TTVR) is rapidly emerging and data on this topic are scarce. Particularly, little is known about which patients are at greatest risk of procedural complications, such as the timing and onset of conduction disturbances necessitating permanent pacemaker implantation, and how such patients are managed. On this background, the TRIPLACE Registry - an investigator-initiated global multicenter registry - is aimed at better understanding the safety and efficacy of orthotopic TTVR.
The study is an early feasibility study to measure individual patient clinical outcomes and effectiveness, evaluate the safety and function of the DUO Transcatheter Tricuspid Coaptation Valve System (DUO System).
The purpose of this clinical study is to evaluate the safety and clinical efficacy of the VDyne System in the treatment of symptomatic severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR).
The primary objective of the study is to generate feasibility safety and performance data for the 4Tech TriCinch Coil System in symptomatic patients suffering from moderate to severe functional tricuspid regurgitation with annular dilatation. The TriCinch Coil System is a percutaneous catheter-based medical device for tricuspid valve repair.
The purpose of this study is to assess the early safety and performance of the Mitralign Percutaneous Tricuspid Valve Annuloplasty System (PTVAS) for the treatment of symptomatic chronic functional tricuspid regurgitation (FTR). The procedure will be performed with the PTVAS device using a non-surgical percutaneous approach to tricuspid valve repair in patients who have FTR with a minimum of moderate tricuspid regurgitation.
Early Feasibility Study to evaluate the safety and performance of the Innoventric Trillium™ Stent Graft in the treatment of severe or greater tricuspid regurgitation (TR).
An early feasibility study to evaluate the safety and performance of 1) the transcatheter delivery and implantation of the Cardiac Implants (CI) annuloplasty ring and 2) the adjustment of the ring approximately 90 days following implantation in patients suffering from ≥ moderate functional tricuspid regurgitation (FTR).
This study will aim to standardize the prehabilitation protocol to optimize patients and document the clinical and echo variables that could improve clinical outcomes of tricuspid valve intervention.
To establish the safety and effectiveness of the Edwards PASCAL Transcatheter Repair System in patients with symptomatic severe tricuspid regurgitation who have been determined to be at an intermediate or greater estimated risk of mortality with tricuspid valve surgery by the cardiac surgeon with concurrence by the local Heart Team
The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate safety and effectiveness of the Tricuspid Valve Repair System (TVRS) for treating symptomatic moderate or greater tricuspid regurgitation (TR) in patients currently on medical management and who are deemed appropriate for percutaneous transcatheter intervention.