RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT07442903

PA Pressure Monitoring in Patients With Tricuspid Regurgitation

Remote Heart Failure Management Using Continuous Pulmonary Artery Pressure Sensors in Patients Undergoing Transcatheter Tricuspid Valve Intervention: A Pilot Study


Sponsor

LMU Klinikum

Enrollment

30 participants

Start Date

Feb 17, 2026

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is a severe and highly prevalent disease that leads to right-sided heart failure. The severity of TR is associated with increasing morbidity and mortality. While severe TR and right-sided heart failure have an impact on the quality of life and prognosis of the individual patient, repeat heart failure hospitalizations challenge limited hospital resources on an institutional level and stress the medical health care system on an economic level. Transcatheter valve interventions (TTVI) including transcatheter tricuspid edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER) and transcather tricuspid valve replacement (TTVR) have been established as effective techniques to safely reduce TR severity in many patients leading to significant improvements in quality-of-life and potential reduction of heart failure hospitalizations. However, the rate of heart failure hospitalizations remains elevated, despite technically successful TTVI. Accordingly, heart failure hospitalizations occur in approximately 15-20% of patients and often result in complicated and prolonged in-hospital treatments. Therefore, optimization of the heart failure management and reduction of post-procedural heart failure hospitalizations are unmet needs in patients after TTVI. Implantable pulmonary artery (PA) pressure sensing (IPAPS) is a novel strategy to improve heart failure management and to reduce heart failure hospitalizations. Continuous PA pressure monitoring provides an early indication of worsening heart failure trends and allows for the guidance of medical management to prevent unplanned hospitalizations. So far, this technology has been predominantly studied in patients with left-sided heart failure. The performance of PA pressure monitoring in right-sided heart failure is understudied. Also, the changes of PA pressure levels in response to TTVI has not yet been investigated. Heart failure hospitalizations in patients with right-sided heart failure are caused by gradual fluid overload resulting in shortness of breath, weight gain, peripheral edema, and ascites. Fluid overload will lead to a simultaneous increase of PA pressure, and therefore, may also be identified early by IPAPS in right-sided heart failure patients. The Cordella PA Sensor System has been designed for multi-parametric heart failure telemonitoring including PA pressure and other vital signs. In clinical trials, the Cordella PA Sensor System demonstrated a significantly lower heart failure hospitalization and all-cause mortality event rate in NYHA class III heart failure patients, when compared to historical PA pressure studies. IPAPS was associated with significant improvements in quality-of-life metrics, while complication rates were low. The Cordella PA Sensor System is expected to receive CE-marking in 2025. The proposed study will be initiated after CE-mark approval, so that all patients will be treated with CE-marked devices and on-label. In this study we will assess the applicability of PA pressure monitoring using the Cordella Sensor device in patients with severe TR undergoing T-TEER (n = 15 patients) or TTVR (n = 15 patients). Included patients will undergo right-heart catheterization for evaluation of TR as indicated by clinical routine practice before TTVI. During right heart catheterization, patients receive implantation of the Cordella Sensor device. Thereafter, PA pressure will be monitored for approximately 4 weeks prior to TTVI. Subsequently, patients undergo T-TEER or TTVR as indicated and recommended by the heart team. PA pressure telemonitoring will be continued after TTVI. The change in PA pressure before TTVI compared to the first month after TTVI will be reported as primary endpoint in this pilot study. The performance of the Cordella PA Sensor System in right-sided heart failure patients for remote heart failure monitoring will be assessed over a 12-month follow-up period as the main secondary endpoint. The concept of IPAPS has the potential to significantly improve the post-procedural heart failure management in patients after TTVI. The proposed pilot study will serve as base for the development of a larger clinical trial evaluating the concept of PA telemonitoring for improving outcomes in patients with severe tricuspid regurgitation and right-sided heart failure.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is implanting a small wireless pressure sensor inside the pulmonary artery (a vessel in the lungs) in people who have severe tricuspid valve regurgitation (a leaky heart valve) and are also having a procedure to repair or replace that valve. The sensor allows doctors to remotely monitor lung blood pressure and guide treatment decisions from home. **You may be eligible if...** - You are 18 or older - You have severe heart failure symptoms (NYHA Class III — significant limitations with moderate activity) despite maximum medication - You have been hospitalized for heart failure in the past 12 months - You are scheduled for a catheter-based tricuspid valve repair or replacement procedure - You are able to use the remote monitoring device and willing to participate **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You are in cardiogenic shock or your circulation is dangerously unstable - You have previously had a tricuspid valve repair or replacement procedure - You have active heart valve infection (endocarditis) - You have tricuspid valve narrowing (stenosis) - Your life expectancy is less than 12 months - You are on dialysis or have a blood clot in the lung (pulmonary embolism) or chronic clot-related pulmonary hypertension Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DEVICEPulmonary artery sensor system

PA pressures will be monitored before and after TTVI by CE-certified PA Sensor System


Locations(2)

LMU Klinikum

Munich, Germany

LMU Munich

München, Germany

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NCT07442903