1. Efficacy and safety of percutaneous patent foramen ovale closure in patients with a hypercoagulable disorder.
- Author
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Ben-Assa E, Herrero-Garibi J, Cruz-Gonzalez I, Elmariah S, Rengifo-Moreno P, Al-Bawardy R, Sakhuja R, Lima FV, Demirjian ZN, Ning M, Buonanno FS, Inglessis I, and Palacios IF
- Subjects
- Cardiac Catheterization adverse effects, Humans, Recurrence, Treatment Outcome, Embolism, Paradoxical diagnosis, Embolism, Paradoxical etiology, Embolism, Paradoxical prevention & control, Foramen Ovale, Patent diagnosis, Foramen Ovale, Patent diagnostic imaging, Ischemic Attack, Transient diagnosis, Ischemic Attack, Transient etiology, Stroke diagnosis, Stroke etiology
- Abstract
Background: Transcatheter closure of patent foramen ovale (PFO) in patients with cryptogenic stroke reduces the rate of recurrent events. Although presence of thrombophilia increases the risk for paradoxical emboli through a PFO, such patients were excluded from large randomized trials., Objectives: We compared the safety and efficacy of percutaneous PFO closure in patients with and without a hypercoagulable state., Methods: Data from 800 consecutive patients undergoing percutaneous PFO closure in our medical center were analyzed. All patients were independently evaluated by specialists in neurology, cardiology, hematology, and vascular medicine. A post-procedural treatment of at least 3 months of anticoagulation was utilized in patients with thrombophilia. Follow-up events included death, recurrent neurological events, and the need for reintervention for significant residual shunt., Results: A hypercoagulable state was found in 239 patients (29.9%). At median follow-up of 41.9 months, there were no differences in the frequencies of stroke or transient ischemic attack between patients with or without thrombophilia (2.5% in non-hypercoagulable group vs. 3.4% in hypercoagulable group, log-rank test p = 0.35). There were no significant differences in baseline demographics, echocardiographic characteristics, procedural success, or complications between groups., Conclusion: Percutaneous PFO closure is a safe and effective therapeutic approach for patients with cryptogenic stroke and an underlying hypercoagulable state., (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
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