Abstract

Abstract Introduction Incomplete left atrial appendage (LAA) closure resulting in residual, significant leak is common after LAA exclusion procedures, potentially hindering an effective thromboembolic (TE) prevention. Detachable coils have found a wide range of applications for transcatheter vascular occlusion/embolization procedures. Purpose We report for the first time the feasibility and efficacy of transcatheter leak closure with detachable coils in patients with incomplete LAA closure. Methods Thirtyconsecutive high TE-riskpatients with a clinically-relevant residual leak (mean age: 72±9 years; 73.3% males; CHA2DS2-VASc: 4.3±1.5; HAS-BLED: 3.4±1.1)underwent percutaneous closure of the LAA patency via detachable coils (Interlock-35 Fibered IDC Occlusion System, Boston Scientific Inc.; Concerto Helix Detachable Coil System, ev3 Endovascular Inc; Azur Embolization System, Terumo Interventional Systems). Trans-oesophageal echocardiography (TEE) was performed at 45±15 days post-procedure to assess for residual LAA patency. Results LAA closure had been previously attempted with a Watchman device in 25 patients, an Amulet in 2 and a LARIAT in 3. At pre-procedural TEE, a moderate/severe leak was documented in 28 (93.3%) patients, a mild one in 2 (6.7%) patients. Procedure andfluoroscopy times were 73±40min and 21±15min, respectively; the mean volume of iodinated contrast medium was 80±48mL. Overall, 114 coils were released into patents' LAA (median: 3 coils/patient; IQR: 2–4). Coil deployment was successful in 98.2% of cases (112/114). The overall complication-free rate was 93.3% (28/30). There were no instances of vascular injury, TE events, device dislodgment. There was 1 major adverse device-related event in an 87-yo male, who developed pericardial tamponade requiring a pericardial window. A small pericardial effusion without hemodynamic compromise was noted in a 78-yo woman and treated conservatively. Follow-up TEE in all patients revealed complete LAA sealing or a minimal-mild leak in 28 cases (93.3%; 22 with no residual leak, 6 with a minimal-mild residual one), and a moderate residual leak in 2 patients (6.7%). Conclusions Transcatheter LAA leak occlusion via detachable coils is a safe, effective and promising approach in high TE-risk patients with incomplete LAA closure.

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