|      Patients who received the    original version of Edwards Lifesciences Corp's    non-invasive heart valve replacement system had    a nearly identical death rate after three years as those who had open-heart surgery, with no increased risk of stroke,    according to results from a clinical trial. The data, presented on    Monday at the American College of Cardiology scientific meeting in San    Francisco, should provide doctors with some reassurance about the durability    of the Edwards transcatheter aortic valve replacement    (TAVR), known as Sapien. Three years after    implantation, the death rates for any reason in high-risk patients deemed    eligible for surgery was nearly identical at 44.2 percent for Sapien and 44.8    percent for those who got new valves via standard open-heart surgery. Heart related death rates    also mirrored each other at three years - 30.1 percent for Sapien versus 30.2    percent for surgery. "It gives me a level    of comfort that ... the late mortality is largely associated not with the    device implanted, but with the intrinsic patient co-morbidities," said    Dr. Martin Leon, a co-lead investigator of the    trial. TAVR allow surgeons to    replace diseased heart valves by threading the    new valve into place through an artery, sparing patients the chest cracking,    open-heart surgery. The Sapien and newer generations of the valve system is    widely considered to be Edwards' most important product line. Edwards' shares, which    had been down nearly 3 percent prior to release of the data, were off $1.72,    or 1.9 percent, at $88.58 on the New York Stock Exchange. Because it is relatively    new and there were concerns about a high number of strokes seen shortly after    the procedure early in the 699-patient study, the big unanswered questions    around Sapien were how it would hold up long after implantation and whether a    higher stroke rate would persist after 30 days. The three-year follow-up    data should help to answer those questions. "There seems to be    no structural deterioration thus far," said Dr. Vinod Thourani, co-lead    researcher of the Partner study, who presented the findings at the meeting. The stroke data was also    encouraging. At three years, the Sapien stroke rate was 8.2 percent compared    with 9.3 percent for the surgical group. The stroke rate with    Sapien had been higher at two years. But between two and three years there    were nine strokes in the surgical arm and only one in the Sapien arm. "So whatever early    tendency that was observed that indicated a higher stroke frequency with TAVR    has been more than negated with the late follow-up," Leon, director of    the Center for Interventional Vascular Therapy at Columbia University Medical    Center in New York, said in an interview. "The main message is    there really is no constant hazard related to TAVR that suggests that stroke    rates will be higher over time," said Leon, who earlier at the meeting    presented data that compared a newer, smaller and easier-to-use version of    the Sapien already available in Europe with the original. A problem of blood    leakage around the valve was overwhelmingly higher with Sapien than with the    surgical group, researchers said. Thourani, co-director of    the Structural Heart and Valve Center at Emory University School of Medicine    in Atlanta, said even mild leakage is associated with higher death rates    after valve replacement. However, Leon said,    "If you look at sub group of patients who had none or trace valvular    leak, they had an extraordinarily low mortality - half that of surgery." Edwards is attempting to    address the problem with newer valves in its developmental pipeline that    include a skirt or cuff around the valve designed to prevent leakage. The Sapien, which has    been supplanted in Europe and elsewhere by the newer Sapien XT, was first    approved in the United States in late 2011, only for patients considered too    frail to survive open-heart surgery. That was expanded last autumn for a    wider group of high-risk patients of the type included in this study. But for U.S. approval to    be expanded into younger and lower-risk patients, Edwards much continue to    demonstrate the long-term safety and durability of the system. The U.S. Food and Drug    Administration has asked for five years of follow-up data and Edwards plans    to follow these patients forever, Leon explained. Of the latest findings,    Leon said: "From as much as you can determine from an additional year of    follow-up, these are all encouraging signs.  |    
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