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Dive into the research topics where Guilherme F. Attizzani is active.

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Featured researches published by Guilherme F. Attizzani.


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2015

5-Year Outcomes After Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation With CoreValve Prosthesis.

Marco Barbanti; Anna Sonia Petronio; Federica Ettori; Azeem Latib; Francesco Bedogni; Federico De Marco; Arnaldo Poli; Carla Boschetti; Marco De Carlo; Claudia Fiorina; Antonio Colombo; Nedy Brambilla; Giuseppe Bruschi; Paola Martina; Claudia Pandolfi; Cristina Giannini; Salvatore Curello; Carmelo Sgroi; Simona Gulino; Martina Patanè; Yohei Ohno; Claudia Tamburino; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Sebastiano Immè; Alessandra Gentili; Corrado Tamburino

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this analysis was to assess 5-year outcomes of transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) using the current technology of the self-expanding CoreValve prosthesis (Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota). BACKGROUND There is a paucity of evidence on long-term durability of currently available transcatheter heart valves. METHODS Starting in June 2007, all consecutive patients with severe aortic stenosis undergoing TAVI with the third-generation 18-F CoreValve device in 8 Italian centers were prospectively included in the ClinicalService Project. For the purposes of this study, we included only consecutive patients with 5-year follow-up data available (n = 353) treated from June 2007 to August 2009. All outcomes were reported according to VARC (Valve Academic Research Consortium)-1 criteria. RESULTS All-cause mortality rates at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years were 21%, 29%, 38%, 48%, and 55.0%, respectively. Cardiovascular mortality rates at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years were 10%, 14%, 19%, 23%, and 28.0%, respectively. The overall neurological event rate at 5 years was 7.5%, of which more than two-thirds occurred early after the procedure. During follow-up, there were 241 rehospitalizations for cardiovascular reasons in 164 (46%) patients. Among all rehospitalizations, acute heart failure was the most frequently reported (42.7%), followed by requirement of permanent pacemaker implantation (17.4%). On echocardiography, mean transaortic gradients decreased from 55.6 ± 16.8 mm Hg (pre-TAVI) to 12.8 ± 10.9 mm Hg (5-year post-TAVI) (p < 0.001). Late prosthesis failure occurred in 5 cases (1.4%); among these, redo TAVI was successfully carried out in 2 patients (0.6%) presenting with symptomatic prosthesis restenosis. The remaining 3 cases of prosthesis failure did not undergo further invasive interventions. Ten patients (2.8%) showed late mild stenosis with a mean transaortic gradient ranging from 20 to 40 mm Hg. No other cases of structural or nonstructural valvular deterioration were observed. Valve thrombosis or late valve embolization were not reported. CONCLUSIONS TAVI with the currently adopted CoreValve generation was associated with sustained clinical outcomes up to 5-year follow-up, with a low rate (1.4%) of significant prosthetic valve degeneration. The procedure appears to be an adequate and lasting resolution of aortic stenosis in selected high-risk patients.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014

Mechanisms, Pathophysiology, and Clinical Aspects of Incomplete Stent Apposition

Guilherme F. Attizzani; Davide Capodanno; Yohei Ohno; Corrado Tamburino

Incomplete stent apposition (ISA) is characterized by the lack of contact of at least 1 stent strut with the vessel wall in a segment not overlying a side branch; it is more commonly found in drug-eluting stents than bare-metal stents. The accurate diagnosis of ISA, initially only possible with intravascular ultrasound, can currently be performed with higher accuracy by optical coherence tomography, which also enables strut-level assessment due to its higher axial resolution. Different circumstances related both to the index procedure and to vascular healing might influence ISA occurrence. Although several histopathology and clinical studies linked ISA to stent thrombosis, potential selection bias precluded definitive conclusions. Initial studies usually performed single time point assessments comparing overall ISA percentage and magnitude in different groups (i.e., stent type), thus hampering a comprehensive understanding of its relationship with vascular healing. Serial intravascular imaging studies that evaluated vascular response heterogeneity recently helped fill this gap. Some particular clinical scenarios such as acute coronary syndromes, bifurcations, tapered vessels, overlapping stents, and chronic total occlusions might predispose to ISA. Interventional cardiologists should be committed to optimal stent choices and techniques of implantation and use intravascular imaging guidance when appropriate to aim at minimizing acute ISA. In addition, the active search for new stent platforms that could accommodate vessel remodeling over time (i.e., self-expandable stents) and for new polymers and/or eluting drugs that could induce less inflammation (hence, less positive remodeling) could ultimately reduce the occurrence of ISA and its potentially harmful consequences.


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2015

Extended use of percutaneous edge-to-edge mitral valve repair beyond EVEREST (Endovascular Valve Edge-to-Edge Repair) criteria: 30-day and 12-month clinical and echocardiographic outcomes from the GRASP (Getting Reduction of Mitral Insufficiency by Percutaneous Clip Implantation) registry.

Guilherme F. Attizzani; Yohei Ohno; Davide Capodanno; Stefano Cannata; Fabio Dipasqua; Sebastiano Immè; Sarah Mangiafico; Marco Barbanti; Margherita Ministeri; Anna Cageggi; Anna Maria Pistritto; Sandra Giaquinta; Silvia Farruggio; Marta Chiarandà; Giuseppe Ronsivalle; Audrey Schnell; Salvatore Scandura; Corrado Tamburino; Piera Capranzano; Carmelo Grasso

OBJECTIVES This study sought to compare, in high-risk patients with 3+ to 4+ mitral regurgitation (MR) dichotomized by baseline echocardiographic features, acute, 30-day, and 12-month outcomes following percutaneous mitral valve repair using the MitraClip. BACKGROUND The feasibility and mid-term outcomes after MitraClip implantation in patients with echocardiographic features different from the EVEREST (Endovascular Valve Edge-to-Edge Repair) I and II trials have been scarcely studied. METHODS Clinical and echocardiographic outcomes through 12-month follow-up of consecutive patients who underwent MitraClip implantation were obtained from an ongoing prospective registry. Two different groups, divided according to baseline echocardiographic criteria (investigational group [EVERESTOFF] and control group [EVERESTON]), were compared. RESULTS Seventy-eight patients were included in EVERESTOFF and 93 patients in EVERESTON groups. Important and comparable acute reductions in MR and no clip-related complications were revealed. The primary safety endpoint at 30 days was comparable between groups (2.6% vs. 6.5%, respectively, p = 0.204); in addition, MR reduction was mostly sustained, whereas equivalent improvement in New York Heart Association functional class were demonstrated. Kaplan-Meier freedom from death, surgery for mitral valve dysfunction, or grade ≥3+ MR at 12 months was demonstrated in 71.4% and 76.2%, respectively, in the EVERESTOFF and EVERESTON groups (log rank p = 0.378). Significant improvements in ejection fraction and reduction in left ventricle volumes were demonstrated in both groups over time, but the baseline between-group differences were sustained. CONCLUSIONS MitraClip implantation in patients with expanded baseline echocardiographic features, compared with the control group, was associated with similar rates of safety and efficacy through 12-month follow-up. Further validation of our findings is warranted.


Heart | 2015

Early discharge after transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation

Marco Barbanti; Piera Capranzano; Yohei Ohno; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Simona Gulino; Sebastiano Immè; Stefano Cannata; Patrizia Aruta; Vera Bottari; Martina Patanè; Claudia Tamburino; Daniele Di Stefano; Wanda Deste; Daniela Giannazzo; Giuseppe Gargiulo; Giuseppe Caruso; Carmelo Sgroi; Denise Todaro; Emanuela Di Simone; Davide Capodanno; Corrado Tamburino

Background The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and the safety of early discharge (within 72 h) after transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) and to identify baseline features and/or peri-procedural variables, which may affect post-TAVI length-of-stay (LoS) duration. Methods and results Patients discharged within 72 h of TAVI (early discharge group) were compared with consecutive patients discharged after 3 days (late discharge group). Propensity-matched cohorts of patients with a 2:1 ratio were created to better control confounding bias. Among 465 patients, 107 (23.0%) were discharged within 3 days of the procedure. Multivariable regression analysis of unmatched patients demonstrated that baseline New York Heart Association (NYHA) class IV (OR: 0.22, 95% CI 0.05 to 0.96; p=0.045) and any bleeding (OR: 0.31, 95% CI 0.74 to 0.92; p=0.031) were less likely to be associated with early discharge after TAVI. Conversely, the year of procedure (OR: 1.66, 95% CI 1.25 to 2.20; p<0.001) and the presence of a permanent pacemaker (PPM) before TAVI (OR: 2.80, 95% CI 1.36 to 5.75; p=0.005) were associated with a higher probability of early discharge. In matched populations, patients in the early discharge group reported lower incidence of in-hospital bleeding (7.9% vs 19.4%, p=0.014), major vascular complications (2.3% vs 9.1%, p=0.038) and PPM implantation (7.9% vs18.5%, p=0.021), whereas after discharge, at 30-day, no significant differences were reported between groups in terms of death (2.2% vs 1.7%, p=0.540), bleeding (0.0% vs 1.1%, p=0.444), PPM implantation (1.1% vs 0.0%, p=0.333) and re-hospitalisation (1.1% vs 1.1%, p=1.000). Conclusions Early discharge (within 72 h) after transfemoral TAVI is feasible and does not seem to jeopardise the early safety of the procedure, when performed in a subset of patients selected by clinical judgement. Patients undergoing TAVI in unstable haemodynamic compensation and patients experiencing bleeding after the procedure demonstrated to be poorly suitable to this approach, whereas increasing experience in post-TAVI management was associated with a reduction of LoS.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014

Percutaneous Mitral Valve Repair With the MitraClip System for Severe Mitral Regurgitation in Patients With Surgical Mitral Valve Repair Failure

Carmelo Grasso; Yohei Ohno; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Stefano Cannata; Sebastiano Immè; Marco Barbanti; Anna Maria Pistritto; Margherita Ministeri; Anna Caggegi; Marta Chiarandà; Fabio Dipasqua; Giuseppe Ronsivalle; Sarah Mangiafico; Salvatore Scandura; Piera Capranzano; Davide Capodanno; Corrado Tamburino

To the Editor: Surgical mitral valve repair (SMVR) is the preferred intervention for patients with either symptomatic severe mitral regurgitation (MR) or asymptomatic severe MR and left ventricular dysfunction [(1)][1]. The rate of freedom from severe MR 10 years after SMVR, however, is reported to


European Heart Journal | 2013

Successful retrograde recanalization of chronic total coronary occlusion with multiple bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (‘full polymer jacket’): initial experience and rationale

Alessio La Manna; Yohei Ohno; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Corrado Tamburino

We report a successful retrograde recanalization of a chronic total occlusion (CTO) in the right coronary artery ( Panel A ) of a 58-year-old male and the implantation of four everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS, Absorb, Abbot Vascular, Santa Clara, CA, USA), which we named ‘full polymer jacket’. Excellent angiographic ( Panel B ) and optical coherence tomography (OCT, LUNAWAVE, …


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2014

Catheter-based edge-to-edge mitral valve repair after percutaneous mitral valve annuloplasty failure.

Carmelo Grasso; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Yohei Ohno; Fabio Dipasqua; Sarah Mangiafico; Margherita Ministeri; Anna Caggegi; Stefano Cannata; Salvatore Scandura; Corrado Tamburino

A 68-year-old high-risk (STS mortality risk score 15.7%) woman presented with congestive heart failure (New York Heart Association functional class III) and severe mitral regurgitation (MR) (vena contracta 7 mm) 1.5 years after percutaneous implantation, in a different hospital, of the Carillon


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2015

New insights on acute expansion and longitudinal elongation of bioresorbable vascular scaffolds in vivo and at bench test: A note of caution on reliance to compliance charts and nominal length

Guilherme F. Attizzani; Yohei Ohno; Davide Capodanno; Bruno Francaviglia; Carmelo Grasso; Carmelo Sgroi; Wei Wang; Yusuke Fujino; Stephen J. Ganocy; Giovanni Longo; Claudia Tamburino; Marilena Di Salvo; Alessio La Manna; Piera Capranzano; Corrado Tamburino

We performed systematic optical coherence tomography (OCT) analyses after bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS) implantation in a “real world” setting aiming at evaluating scaffold expansion and longitudinal integrity.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Percutaneous mitral valve repair with the MitraClip system in the elderly: One-year outcomes from the GRASP registry

Salvatore Scandura; Piera Capranzano; Anna Caggegi; Carmelo Grasso; Giuseppe Ronsivalle; Sarah Mangiafico; Yohei Ohno; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Stefano Cannata; Sandra Giaquinta; Silvia Farruggio; Margherita Ministeri; Fabio Dipasqua; Anna Maria Pistritto; Sebastiano Immè; Davide Capodanno; Maria Elena Di Salvo; Corrado Tamburino

BACKGROUND Although mitral regurgitation (MR) affects a relevant and increasing number of elderly, an optimal management of this high-risk population is challenging. METHODS AND RESULTS The aim of this prospective, observational study was to compare one-year outcomes of MitraClip therapy in high surgical risk patients with moderate-to-severe or severe MR between patients aged <75 versus ≥75years. A total of 180 patients were included: 92 were <75years and 88 were ≥75years old. At one-year follow-up the primary efficacy endpoint (composite of death, surgery for mitral valve dysfunction and grade 3+ or 4+ MR) occurred in 41 patients (24.5%), with similar rates between those aged <75years (23.9%) and those ≥75years (25.2%), p=0.912. A total of 21 (12.2%) deaths were observed within 1year after the MitraClip procedure, without significant differences in cumulative mortality rates between elderly and younger patients (10.8% vs. 13.3%, respectively, p=0.574). Compared with baseline, the significant reduction in MR severity achieved after the procedure was sustained at one-year follow-up, in both elderly and younger patients and a significant improvement in NYHA functional class was observed in both groups. A total of 18 (10.0%) patients experienced a re-hospitalization for acute heart failure within one-year after the MitraClip procedure, with no significant differences between elderly and younger. At one-year follow-up both elderly and younger patients showed significant reductions in left ventricular volumes, with changes of similar extent between the two subgroups. CONCLUSIONS MitraClip therapy can be considered a viable option also among subsets with more advanced age.


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2014

Acute Left Atrial Spontaneous Echocardiographic Contrast and Suspicious Thrombus Formation Following Mitral Regurgitation Reduction With the MitraClip System

Yohei Ohno; Guilherme F. Attizzani; Davide Capodanno; Fabio Dipasqua; Marco Barbanti; Stefano Cannata; Sebastiano Immè; Margherita Ministeri; Anna Caggegi; Anna Maria Pistritto; Giuseppe Ronsivalle; Piera Capranzano; Sarah Mangiafico; Salvatore Scandura; Corrado Tamburino; Carmelo Grasso

An 87-year-old woman with chronic atrial fibrillation presented with congestive heart failure (New York Heart Association functional class III) despite guideline-directed medical therapy. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) showed severe eccentric mitral regurgitation (MR) (i.e., vena contracta

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