Aortic stenosis: Trial examines the best treatment
Sunnybrook has joined an international trial examining the best treatment for patients with severe aortic stenosis, the narrowing of the aortic valve, at intermediate risk of complications from open-heart surgery.
The Surgical Replacement and Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (SURTAVI) trial, is in the process of recruiting 2,500 patients and is the largest randomized, multi-site trial on transcatheter aortic valve implementation (TAVI) to date. Patients will receive either a Medtronic CoreValve system or surgical aortic valve replacement and be followed for five years.
“TAVI has already become the ‘gold standard’ therapeutic option for high-surgical risk or inoperable patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis. However, there are many more patients who are deemed at intermediate risk for surgery. These patients tend to be younger with fewer comorbidities than the current patients we typically treat with TAVI,” says Dr. Sam Radhakrishnan, interventional cardiologist and Director, Cardiac Catheterization Labs, Sunnybrook. “This trial will provide valuable information as to whether a less invasive option like TAVI is as good an option for this group of intermediate-risk patients, or whether traditional aortic valve replacement is better.”
Sunnybrook is one of five sites in Canada participating in the trial and has already recruited six patients, with the goal of approximately 25 more patients over the next two years. Patients are evaluated by an experienced heart team at Sunnybrook’s Schulich Heart Centre that includes interventional cardiologists and cardiac surgeons.
“I often hear patients asking whether there are less invasive options for aortic stenosis, and it’s our hope that this trial will provide good data for this group,” adds Dr. Stephen Fremes, cardiac surgeon, Sunnybrook, who is co-leading the SURTAVI trial at Sunnybrook with Dr. Radhakrishnan. “Our goal is to provide evidence-based recommendations in the treatment of severe aortic stenosis so that patients receive the most effective treatment."