In this meta-analysis of four RCTs including 3528 patients, we evaluated periprocedural stroke in patients undergoing TAVI using the Sentinel™ CPS. The main findings of the analysis are: (1) there was no difference in association of periprocedural stroke in TAVI with the Sentinel™ CPS compared to TAVI without TCEP; (2) TAVI with the Sentinel™ CPS compared to TAVI without TCEP was associated with a lower risk of periprocedural disabling stroke; (3) there was no difference in the other secondary outcomes, including non-disabling stroke, all-cause mortality, TIA, delirium, acute kidney injury, vascular complications, bleeding events, or need of pacemaker implantation in patients undergoing TAVI with the Sentinel™ CPS.
Debate on Stroke with the Sentinel™ CPSRegarding stroke, we found that utilization of the Sentinel™ CPS was not associated with a difference in the outcome of periprocedural stroke, but it was associated with a statistically significant reduction in risk of disabling stroke. These are important findings as the risk of stroke remains a major concern in TAVI. In the PARTNER trial published in 2011, the rates of major stroke were 3.8% in the TAVI group at 30 days [8]. Most of these strokes occurred 1–3 days post-procedure [9].
The occurrence of periprocedural stroke has been further explored by assessment of new ischemic regions in the brain in the CLEAN-TAVI trial published by Haussig et al. where they found that the Sentinel™ CPS group had fewer new lesions via DW-MRI as well as smaller volumes of these lesions at 2 days post-TAVI when compared to the control group [4]. Van Mieghem et al. in MISTRAL-C aimed to add to these findings by evaluating new DW-MRI findings post-TAVI, as well as clinical manifestations of these lesions with a longer post-procedural follow-up of 5 and 7 days [5]. The group that underwent TAVI with the Sentinel™ CPS had 100% capture of embolic debris. Additionally, there was a reduced number of new lesions and lesion size in the Sentinel™ CPS group compared to the group without TCEP. They also found that there was diminished neurologic deterioration with the use of the Sentinel™ CPS. However, the study was limited due to poor follow-up with DW-MRI given that only 57% of randomized patients had an assessment at 5-days post-procedure. Additionally, both the CLEAN-TAVI [4] and MISTRAL-C [5] trials had a very small sample sizes; hence, the findings may not be applicable to all comers. Due to the clinical benefit of capturing periprocedural embolic debris in these two RCTs, they were included in our meta-analysis and further highlighted the lower risk of disabling stroke with use of the Sentinel™ CPS.
MACCE, including risk of stroke were studied as primary outcomes in a few trials, including SENTINEL [6], Seeger et al. [10], and PROTECTED-TAVR [11]. These studies were conflicting, as some favored the use of the Sentinel™ CPS due to decreased stroke rates and increased stroke-free survival, while others showed no benefit. Moreover, Kapadia et al. in 2017 found that the Sentinel™ CPS met non-inferiority criteria as MACCE was 7.3% in the Sentinel™ CPS arm compared to the historical performance of 18.3%, P < 0.001; however, it did not prove to be superior to the control group (MACCE = 9.9%, P = 0.405) [6]. This trial was largely underpowered to detect statistically significant endpoints, as the sample size was only 363 patients.
Given the low power to detect a statistically significant reduction in risk of periprocedural stroke in initial RCTs, Seeger et al. performed a prospective study with propensity score matched (PSM) groups and found that the odds of stroke occurred less with the Sentinel™ CPS than without, 2.1 vs. 6.8%, odds ratio (OR) 0.3, P = 0.01 [10]. This led to a pooled analysis with PSM patients from the CLEAN-TAVI [4] and SENTINEL [6] safety trials to assess risk of periprocedural stroke. These results were in favor of the Sentinel™ CPS with the OR for stroke being 0.35, P = 0.0028 and OR for all-cause mortality being 0.34, P = 0.0013 [12].
Regarding studies that showed no benefit of the Sentinel™ CPS, an observational study that used the Society for Thoracic Surgeons/American College of Cardiology Transcatheter Valve Therapy Registry assessed the risk of periprocedural stroke in 123,186 patients and found no difference for in-hospital stroke, RR 0.9 (95% CI 0.68–1.13) when compared to no TCEP [13]. Regarding RCTs, PROTECTED TAVR [11] was the largest RCT to evaluate the Sentinel™ CPS with 3000 patients enrolled. It demonstrated no difference in the incidence of periprocedural stroke with the use of the Sentinel™ CPS (2.3% TCEP vs. 2.9% control, P = 0.30) [11].
Overall, the conflicting results of individual trials and studies made it unclear whether this dual-filter device provided benefit in protection from embolic stroke. By pooling data from individual RCTs, our meta-analysis was able to elucidate significant findings in favor of the Sentinel™ CPS in decreasing the risk of periprocedural disabling stroke. The major limitation of most of these individual trials to detect a significant effect was their small sample size; therefore, it is possible that by aggregating the individual RCTs and increasing the power by means of a meta-analysis, the true significant effect of the Sentinel™ CPS was able to be detected. On the other hand, aggregating the data for secondary outcomes did not reveal any significant findings. This suggests that these outcomes did not have a significant difference with the Sentinel™ CPS or that further RCTs with larger sample sizes are needed to clarify findings of the Sentinel™ CPS on these secondary outcomes.
In comparing our findings with other meta-analysis, we found contrasting results. In 2020, Ndunda and group performed a meta-analysis with sensitivity analysis on three RCTs that were included in our study, but also a PSM cohort study that was not included in our study [14]. In their primary analysis, they found results in favor of the Sentinel™ CPS with reduced risk of stroke (RR 0.51, P = 0.002), overall mortality (RR 0.34, P = 0.03), and risk of bleeding (RR 0.50, P = 0.04) at 30 days [14]. Despite these promising results, skepticism stemmed from the results of the sensitivity analysis, which dissolved the significance that was initially seen for risk of stroke and 30-day mortality. The authors attributed the difference between the primary analysis and sensitivity analysis due to exclusion of the only non-RCT, Seeger et al. [10], and argued that the true difference was only seen with higher power to account for stroke as the rare event. The study was promising but left unanswered questions. We performed our meta-analysis with exclusion of Seeger et al. [10] to limit the potential for bias from non-RCTs. We also included results from PROTECCTED TAVR [11], an RCT by Kapadia and group that was published after the results of the meta-analysis by Ndunda and group [14] were published.
In June 2023, Wolfrum and group performed a meta-analysis [15] on four RCTs and one PSM study to investigate the efficacy of the Sentinel™ CPS. They included the same RCTs that Ndunda et al. [14] incorporated in their meta-analysis, but also data from PROTECTED TAVR [11] with an aggregate of 4066 patients included. Data from PROTECTED TAVR [11] carried the most weight, totaling 73.7% of the patient population, while the next largest study, Seeger et al. [10], represented 13.77%. Final analysis not only showed that the Sentinel™ CPS significantly reduced risk of stroke (RR 0.67, P = 0.02), but also reduced risk of disabling stroke (RR 0.33, P = 0.001) [15]. These findings were in correlation with previous meta-analysis; however, there was significant heterogeneity of the trials evaluated as most were RCTs; however, a non-randomized prospective study was also included. This could have led to the same limitation that Ndunda and group [14] encountered from their sensitivity analysis. Nonetheless, we found similar findings in our meta-analysis with regards to disabling stroke.
Regarding secondary outcomes, such as bleeding, vascular and procedural complications, we did not find a significant benefit with the Sentinel™ CPS regarding these measures. Interestingly, Wolfrum et al. [15] found a reduced risk of major or life-threatening risk of bleeding with the Sentinel™ CPS (RR 0.37, P = 0.02); however, there was no difference with regards to all-cause mortality, major vascular complications, and acute kidney injury. In our meta-analysis, we assessed outcomes of major or life-threatening bleeding and minor bleeding as independent outcomes and found no significant difference between the Sentinel™ CPS group and no TCEP group. When comparing our findings with Wolfrum et al. [15], we found that three studies were included in their analysis for this outcome while we had two studies that were among their three. The study that was not included in our meta-analysis was Seeger et al. [10]. This study accounted for the majority of their major bleeding population, accounting for 63.5% of the patients which likely contributed to the significant findings in the Sentinel™ CPS arm in terms of major or life-threating bleeding outcomes. We did not include Seeger et al. [10] in our analysis.
Subgroup Analysis and Future DirectionWe found a NNT of 123 patients to prevent the event of a disabling stroke. This finding necessitates the use of subgroup analysis to determine which patients would derive the most benefit from the Sentinel™ CPS. Unfortunately, PROTECTED TAVR [11] was the only trial that performed subgroup analysis on the Sentinel™ CPS and found no difference in the risk of stroke when analyzing based on patient demographics, comorbidities, surgical risk, valvular anatomy, and procedural variables. Future studies are needed to assess high-risk variables, such as peripheral vascular disease, atrial fibrillation, previous stroke, valve calcification, and procedural variables, such as pre- and post-dilation among other variables to determine which patients would benefit the most from the Sentinel™ CPS to prevent periprocedural disabling stroke.
LimitationsOne major limitation of the trials, except for PROTECTED TAVR [11], was the use of small sample sizes, thus limiting the power of the endpoints. Furthermore, a relatively short follow-up period was employed by all the trials included in this analysis. This could represent a pitfall for these trials as stroke symptoms may be subtle and only detected after extensive outpatient examination, or by the patient over a longer period of time. Additionally, because various TAVI valves were used in the trials, the results may be biased in that each TAVI valve may have a different inherent embolization risk. Furthermore, the Sentinel™ CPS is currently the only US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved device for embolic protection during TAVI, therefore limiting the ability to compare outcomes to other TCEP devices. The Sentinel™ device does not provide protection for the left vertebral artery, which could be a potential avenue for embolization. Lastly, regarding secondary outcomes, not all trials reported these outcomes, which could have played a role in the discrepancy revealed in our discussion between previous works and ours. Specifically, major or life-threatening bleeding was only reported in CLEAN-TAVI [4] and MISTRAL-C [5], resulting in a low sample size to detect significant differences. Overall, further work is needed to close these gaps and include analysis on valvular and procedural variables to determine independent stroke events.
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