Percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale (PFO) to prevent recurrent paradoxical thromboembolic events has become the standard of care. However, it remains uncertain if transesophageal echocardiography (TOE) guidance improves procedural success with an existing comprehensive pre-procedural TOE. The aim of the study was to compare the effectiveness of percutaneous PFO closure guided by fluoroscopy (FS) only vs TOE plus FS. Consecutive patients undergoing percutaneous PFO closure between February 2017 and April 2023 were analyzed. Based on pre-procedural echocardiography, patients were scheduled either for an FS-only or TOE/FS-guided procedure. The primary-endpoint was effective PFO-closure (residual-shunt grade 0/1 at 6-month follow-up). The secondary-endpoints included procedural safety/efficacy and major adverse cardiovascular events during hospital stay and at the 6-month follow-up. Two hundred-three patients (mean age 51.8 ± 12.5 years, 39.4% women, Risk of Paradoxical Embolism score = 7 [IQR = 6-7]) underwent PFO closure with FS-only guidance (88 patients, 43.3%) or TOE/FS guidance (115 patients, 56.7%). The main indications for PFO closure were cryptogenic stroke (179 patients, 88.2%) and peripheral embolism (13 patients, 6.4%). At baseline, a right-to-left shunt of grade 2 or higher was present in 199 patients (98%). The procedure time in the FS group was shorter (13 minutes in the FS group vs 16.5 minutes in the TOE/FS group, P = .002). The immediate procedural success was 99.5%. At 6 months, effective closure was achieved in 195 patients (96.1% [FS group: 97.7% vs TOE/FS group 97.8%, P = .29]). The rates of atrial fibrillation and recurrent thromboembolic events were not different among the procedural strategies (3.9% [P = .47] and 0.5% [P = .43]). After comprehensive pre-procedural echocardiography workup, PFO closure with FS guidance only seems equally safe and effective as TOE/FS guidance. A standardized pre-procedural echocardiography protocol facilitates procedural planning with excellent echocardiographic and clinical outcomes.
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