Abstract
Objective
This study examined the learning curve for transseptal puncture (TSP) during transcatheter edge-to-edge mitral valve repair (TEER) performed by a dedicated mitral valve structural heart team. Effective TSP is mandatory for TEER but can be time-consuming and associated with complications including pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade.
Methods
TSP was performed on 107 consecutive patients (76 ± 1 years, 52% male) undergoing TEER between 2014 and 2019. TSP was performed by each structural heart team member (1 cardiologist, 2 cardiac surgeons) on a rotating case-by-case basis. No team member had prior independent TSP experience. Data collected included total procedure time, TSP time (time elapsed between procedure start and septal crossing), and number of TSP attempts before successful puncture. Cumulative sum (CUSUM) of deviations from the mean across sequential cases were used to examine learning curves.
Results
Median total procedure time was 107 min, and the median TSP time was 14 min. Greater case number was significantly associated with both lower TSP time (r s = −0.22, P = 0.022) and lower total procedure time (r s = −0.29, P = 0.003). The majority of patients required only 1 TSP attempt (79%). There was a significant quadratic relationship between case number and the CUSUM for TSP time, with the learning curve peaking at 49 cases.
Conclusions
TSP for TEER has a substantial learning curve, requiring >50 cases to achieve acceptable efficiency. Even once proficiency is demonstrated, TSP remains a time-consuming component of TEER. Improvements in transseptal access technology may significantly decrease the time needed to master TSP and may improve the safety and precision of the procedure.
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References
Supplementary Material
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