Study: Newer LVAD may trigger more complications; what can be done?
The continuous-flow HeartMate II left ventricular assist device is smaller and more durable than previous generations. Image Source: Thoratec |
“Two complications commonly associated with LVAD therapy are GI bleeding and stroke,” Jeffrey A. Morgan, MD, of the Heart and Vascular Institute at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, and principal investigator of the studies, told Cardiovascular Business.
Morgan, who presented these data at the ASAIO conference June 11 in Washington, D.C., and colleagues evaluated the complication rates associated with the HeartMate II device in 64 chronic heart failure (HF) patients who received a device between March 2006 and May 2010. Of the 64 patients, 48 underwent implantation of a HeartMate II LVAD device as a bridge-to-transplant operation while 16 patients received the device as a destination therapy.
The first study used GI bleeding as the primary endpoint; the second study used development of a major adverse neurologic event (ANE). All patients received anticoagulation therapy that consisted of 81 mg of aspirin and warfarin with a target international normalized ratio (INR) ratio of 2.0 to 2.5.
“What we found was a 22 percent incidence of GI bleeding and a 7.8 percent incidence of stroke for patients who received the HeartMate II device,” Morgan noted.
During the first study, Morgan and colleagues characterized the location of GI bleeding and assessed whether these events affected mortality. “While these complications did not ultimately affect mortality, they did represent a significant morbidity, which required patients to be transfused both blood as well as blood products to reverse the coagulopathy,” Morgan noted.
The researchers reported that at the index event, the INR averaged 2.18 and platelet count was 230 x 109/l. There were no significant differences in age, gender, race, etiology of HF, diabetes, chronic renal insufficiency or body mass index between patients with and without GI bleeding. In a multivariate analysis, Morgan et al found that the only independent predictor of GI bleeds was a previous history of GI bleeding. This occurred in 35.7 percent of patients with a GI bleed versus 16 percent of those without. There were no thromboembolic complications reported.
The second study found that ANEs occurred in 7.8 percent of patients and most cases were hemorrhagic stroke, Morgan noted. Patients who experienced these events were older, had a higher incidence of chronic renal insufficiency and higher INRs at the time of the index event. The researchers noted that these events were associated with a 60 percent 90-day mortality rate.
Older age, chronic renal insufficiency and an INR greater than three were independent predictors of ANEs; however, having an INR greater than three was the strongest predictor.
Morgan hypothesized that GI bleeding occured for two reasons: the development of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in the gut as a result of nonpulsatile, continuous-flow and high INRs. “The lack of pulsatility may be a contributing factor to GI bleeding and also lead to the development of arteriovenous malformations,” he said.
Susan Benton Russell, spokesperson for Pleasanton, Calif.-based Thoratec, maker of HeartMate II, told Cardiovascular Business that the median INR of patients who experienced a bleeding event during the trial was 2.9, what she called “high.” Additionally, she noted that in the current study patients were being managed at an INR range of 2.0-3.0, “the older recommendation,” which could have been linked to the neurological complications found in the study. However, to thwart off these complications, Morgan and colleagues suggested that the anticoagulation target be lowered to 1.8 to 2.2 rather than the previous rate of 2.0 to 3.0.
“The analysis presented at ASAIO is on 64 HeartMate II patients and demonstrates that in cases where patients experienced a gastrointestinal bleeding event that clinicians were able to make adjustment to those patients’ anticoagulation regimen to effectively manage the situation,” Benton Russell said.
“Previous publications have also demonstrated that HeartMate II allows for effective adjustments of anticoagulation should patients have this type of event,” Benton Russell said. A previous head-to-head comparison of the HeartMate II and HeartMate XVE devices did not show increased incidence of bleeding with HeartMate II, she said. “In fact, HeartMate II demonstrated a strong tend toward less bleeding (requiring blood transfusion) than the HeartMate XVE,” Benton Russell noted.
She was referring to a study published in a 2009 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine that concluded that continuous-flow LVAD device (HeartMate II, Thoratec) in patients with advanced HF improved the probability of survival free from stroke and device failure at two years compared with a pulsatile device (HeartMate XVE, Thoratec).
The randomized trial enrolled 200 patients ineligible for transplant who received either a continuous-flow device (134 patients) or an approved pulsatile-flow device (66 patients). Slaughter et al used survival from disabling stroke at two years and reoperation to repair or replace the device as the primary outcomes (NEJM 2009; 361: 2231-2251). The primary endpoint was reached in 46 percent of patients who received HeartMate II and 11 percent of those who received HeartMate XVE. Patients who received HeartMate II also had higher survival rates at two years compared to patients who received HeartMate XVE, 58 percent versus 24 percent, and adverse events occurred less frequently in patients who received HeartMate II.
Benton Russell concluded that “the outcomes with HeartMate II continue to be outstanding with patients experiencing an improvement in survival and quality of life versus alternative therapies for these very sick heart failure patients.”
Nearly 86 patients at Henry Ford and almost 5,000 patients globally have been implanted with the HeartMate II LVAD device, Morgan said. He concluded that a built-in pulsatility mechanism on the device could help prevent GI bleeds. Additionally, if the device was more biocompatible, event rates could decline.