PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May. 17, 2012-- Medtronic, Inc. (NYSE: MDT) today announced new results from the Medtronic CoreValve ADVANCE Study, which found that women and men benefitted similarly from...
The gender analysis, a secondary-endpoint evaluation in the real-world CoreValve ADVANCE Study, found that survival rates were nearly identical between genders, with no statistical differences in 30-day and 6-month all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality or the 30-day MACCE endpoint (Major Adverse Cardiac & Cerebrovascular Events, a composite of all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, emergent cardiac surgery or percutaneous re-intervention, and stroke).
Overall, patients experienced low 30-day stroke rates (2.9 percent overall), with the combined stroke rates of major and minor strokes being very low (major 1.2 percent, and minor 1.7 percent). However, female patients experienced a statistically higher rate of strokes (4.4 percent vs. 1.4 percent; p-value <0.01), major vascular complications (14.1 percent vs. 7.1 percent; p-value <0.01) and major bleeding (5.0 percent vs. 3.1 percent; p-value <0.01). For minor stroke between genders, and for major strokes between genders, differences were not significant, though there was a trend for women to have more minor strokes than men.
“This study is an important contribution to the growing base of research on TAVI, and sheds light on the unique needs for managing severe aortic stenosis in women,” said
Women and men benefited similarly from the CoreValve System even though women (51 percent of patients) and men (49 percent of patients) had different risk profiles. Specifically, at the time of enrollment, women as compared to men were:
“The robust ADVANCE trial provides a compelling discovery that the CoreValve System is an excellent therapeutic option for both men and women, and it helps us begin to consider how men and women present differently prior to implant and might be managed accordingly,” said
The ADVANCE study is one of the largest multicenter transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) trials to date, with 1,015 patients consecutively treated at 44 experienced TAVI centers in 12 countries. Clinical endpoints were calculated according to
The Medtronic CoreValve System received CE (Conformite Europeenne) Mark in 2007 for the treatment of patients deemed at high or extreme risk for surgery. Since then, it has been implanted in more than 27,000 people in more than 50 countries outside the U.S. The CoreValve System is available in three sizes (26mm, 29mm and 31mm), and is the only transcatheter aortic valve implantation system approved for direct aortic or subclavian access.
Worldwide, approximately 300,000 people have been diagnosed with symptomatic, severe aortic stenosis, and approximately one-third of these patients are deemed at too high a risk for open-heart surgery.1
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1Decision-making in elderly patients with severe aortic stenosis: why are so many denied surgery?
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