News | Heart Valve Technology | March 07, 2018

FDA Expands Approval of Replacement Heart Valve

This replacement heart valve is the smallest mechanical valve size approved in the world

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration expanded the approval of a heart valve to include a size small enough to be used in newborn pediatric patients to treat heart defects.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration expanded the approval of a heart valve to include a size small enough to be used in newborn pediatric patients to treat heart defects. Specifically, the agency approved the Masters Series Mechanical Heart Valve with Hemodynamic Plus (HP) Sewing Cuff to include the 15-mm valve size, making it the smallest mechanical heart valve approved in the world.

“While larger replacement heart valves have been approved for years, there is an unmet need in young pediatric patients, especially newborns and infants, with congenital valve defects who may be too small to use currently-marketed heart valves,” said Jeff Shuren, M.D., J.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health.

Heart valve disease occurs if one or more of the four heart valves, which direct the flow of blood through the heart, fail to function properly. In pediatric patients, a malfunctioning heart valve is often the result of a congenital heart defect at birth. Each year, more than 35,000 babies in the U.S. are born with congenital heart defects, some of which will require heart valve surgery and, potentially, replacement heart valve surgery. However, prior to today’s approval, there have been limited replacement heart valve options available because of the patients’ small size. The Masters Series 15-mm HP valve represents an important treatment option for these patients.

The Master Series Mechanical Heart Valve is a rotatable, bileaflet (two-leaflet) valve designed for implantation in the aortic or mitral position. The bileaflet design consists of two semi-circular discs that open and close in response to blood pressure changes during the heartbeat, similar to a patient’s own valve.

The Masters Series Mechanical Heart Valve was first approved in 1995 for patients with a diseased, damaged or malfunctioning aortic or mitral heart valve. The device is also approved for use in replacing previously implanted aortic or mitral prosthetic heart valves. Today’s approval expands the range of valve sizes available, providing smaller patients another treatment option.

The FDA evaluated clinical data from a single-arm study of 20 pediatric patients with serious heart failure ranging in age from 1.5 weeks to 27 months at the time of mitral valve implant. The data showed that one year after the implant procedure, the probability of survival was 69.3 percent and the probability of not experiencing a valve-related adverse event was 66.8 percent. Serious valve-related adverse events observed during the study through one-year follow-up included blood clots in the device and bleeding in the brain. Anticoagulation (blood thinning) therapy may be necessary after the procedure, to prevent clotting on the device, which can increase the risk of bleeding.

The Master Series Mechanical Heart Valve should not be used by patients unable to tolerate anticoagulation therapy.

The FDA granted approval of the Master Series Heart Valve to St. Jude Medical. 

For more information: www.fda.gov


Related Content

News | Heart Valve Technology

Sept. 1, 2024 — Researchers at UTHealth Houston have identified genetic variants linked to a rare form of bicuspid ...

Home September 04, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

June 27, 2024 — The sheer scale of undiagnosed heart valve disease in our aging population has been revealed for the ...

Home June 27, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

June 21, 2024 — UC San Francisco interventional cardiologists and interventional echocardiographers recently performed ...

Home June 21, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

June 10, 2024 — Atrium Health Sanger Heart & Vascular Institute has successfully completed the first commercial ...

Home June 10, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

April 17, 2024 —CPR Therapeutics, Inc. (CPR-T), an early-stage medtech startup funded by the N.I.H and N.S.F to develop ...

Home April 17, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

April 1, 2024 — Roughly 25,000 Americans die each year from valvular heart disease, but researchers from Rutgers Health ...

Home April 01, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

January 4, 2024 — Findings from a published case series research letter by the Henry Ford Health Structural Heart ...

Home January 04, 2024
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

December 22, 2023 — TRiCares SAS (“TRiCares”), a privately held pioneer in the field of minimally invasive treatment of ...

Home December 22, 2023
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

December 18, 2023 — Death rates related to infective endocarditis declined in most adults across the U.S. within the ...

Home December 18, 2023
Home
News | Heart Valve Technology

December 12, 2023 — Patients who received the anticoagulant drug warfarin after bioprosthetic aortic valve replacement ...

Home December 12, 2023
Home
Subscribe Now