The trial will enroll patients who are considered to have a high or an extreme surgical risk (meaning they would not be considered) for open-heart surgery.
The trial is evaluating the Portico valve and delivery system in patients with symptomatic severe aortic stenosis, a narrowing of the aortic valve that significantly impedes blood from flowing out of the heart. During transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedures, a Portico heart valve is delivered via a catheter using either a transfemoral (through the artery in the leg) or an alternative access approach in order to gain access to the heart. The valve is positioned in the patient’s heart as it continues to beat, alleviating the need for cardiopulmonary bypass, where a machine takes over a patient’s heart and lung function. Patients are evaluated by a heart team consisting of a cardiac surgeon and an interventional cardiologist.
The first implants were conducted the same day on opposite coasts of the United States. One operating team comprising Raj Makkar, M.D., director of Interventional Cardiology, and Wen Cheng, M.D., cardiothoracic surgeon and program director of the Thoracic Surgery Residency Program, performed a Portico TAVR procedure at Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles. The other operating team was composed of Gregory P. Fontana, M.D., cardiac surgeon and chairman of the department of cardiothoracic surgery and Carlos Ruiz, M.D., an interventional cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, N.Y.
Fontana and Makkar serve as co-principal investigators for the trial.
“As we continue to collect clinical evidence on the best way to treat patients identified as high or at extreme risk for the open-heart valve replacement procedure, the Portico valve represents a life-saving treatment option. The valve and delivery system were designed to more safely treat heart failure symptoms in patients with stenotic valves,” said Fontana.
“The ability to fully resheath and precisely reposition the Portico valve at the implant site prior to valve deployment helps achieve accurate placement, which may simplify the implant procedure and help minimize procedural risk for the patient,” said Dr. Makkar.
Portico is built on St. Jude's Trifecta valve platform.
“We have received positive feedback on the advanced features of the Portico valve from the experienced physicians who have used it. The Portico valve is an attractive option that will enable interventional cardiologists and cardiac surgeons who perform TAVR procedures to treat patients who might not otherwise be eligible for surgery,” said Mark Carlson, M.D., chief medical officer and vice president of global clinical affairs at St. Jude Medical.
Designed in collaboration with physicians, the self-expanding Portico valve is designed to maintain hemodynamics similar to that of a natural valve, while also addressing issues from early generations of transcatheter valves, such as paravalvular leak and the need for a permanent pacemaker as a result of the implant.
A prospective, multi-center, randomized, controlled clinical trial, the trial is evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Portico transcatheter aortic valve system in reducing the risk of death and disabling stroke in patients with high or extreme surgical risk for open-heart valve replacement surgery.
Patients at up to 40 U.S. sites will be randomized based on the appropriate access method, including transfemoral, transapical (valve delivered via the left ventricle of the heart), direct aortic (through the ascending aorta), or subclavian (through an artery located below the collar bone). All trial participants will undergo a TAVR procedure receiving either a Portico valve or another commercially available TAVR valve in the U.S. data that are collected will be used to support approval of the device by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
In addition to randomization, the PORTICO trial will also collect information in the form of a registry on patients with a degenerated aortic surgical bioprosthetic valve (creating a valve-in-valve registry.) These are patients in the trial who previously had valve replacement surgery and now are having a Portico valve placed inside an existing artificial valve without removing it.
The 23 millimeter Portico transcatheter aortic heart valve and transfemoral delivery system received a CE mark in 2012 and the 25 mm Portico valve received a CE mark in 2013. CE mark clinical trials are currently underway for additional valve sizes and delivery approaches. The Portico transcatheter aortic heart valve system is limited to investigational use in the United States.
According to data cited by St. Jude officials, Aortic stenosis is the third most prevalent form of cardiovascular disease in the Western world after hypertension and coronary artery disease. Considered a potentially life-threatening condition, the aortic heart valve becomes calcified and does not open properly. Roughly 25 percent of people 65 and older, have aortic valve thickening and 3 percent age 75 and older have severe stenosis.
St. Paul, Minn.-based St. Jude Medical has four major clinical focus areas that include cardiac rhythm management, atrial fibrillation, cardiovascular and neuromodulation.