Abstract

A 74-year-old man who had undergone surgical aortic valve replacement with the SOLO SMART stentless bioprosthetic valve 25 mm (LivaNova PLC, London, UK) and mitral valve replacement with MOSAIC 29 mm (Medtronic, Minneapolis, USA) 4 years previously was diagnosed with congestive heart failure, and transferred to our hospital. Echocardiography revealed severe aortic regurgitation caused by degraded bioprosthetic valve. He required continuous dobutamine administration to maintain hemodynamics. As a result of heart team discussion, we decided to perform transcatheter valve-in-valve implantation (ViV-TAVI) using balloon expandable valve (Sapien 3, Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, USA). Since SOLO SMART stentless valve was placed to Valsalva sinus at the supra-annular level with continuous sutures, we planned to anchor TAVI valve 4 mm to the left ventricular side from the bottom of the failed stentless valve. Two pigtail catheters were placed at the bottom of the failed stentless valve leaflet to mark the nadir of stentless valve. After ViV-TAVI, the patient no longer required catecholamine administration and was discharged home one month later. This is the first case of ViV-TAVI using balloon expandable valve for failed SOLO SMART stentless bioprosthetic valve in a Japanese patient. Learning objectiveTranscatheter valve-in-valve implantation (ViV-TAVI) for stentless valves is known to be technically challenging due to poor fluoroscopic visibility. Because the SOLO SMART stentless bioprosthetic valve is sutured to the wall of the sinus of Valsalva above the annulus, the landing point of transcatheter heart valve is at a native annulus which is lower than the bottom of the SOLO SMART leaflet. We describe the first Japanese case of ViV-TAVI with balloon expandable valve for the SOLO SMART stentless bioprosthetic valve.

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