Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT07145463

Prospective, Multicenter, Randomized Controlled Clinical Study Evaluating the VitaFlow Liberty® Flex Transcatheter Aortic Valve Delivery System for the Treatment of Severe Aortic Stenosis Lesions

A Prospective, Multicenter, Randomized Controlled Clinical Study Evaluating the VitaFlow Liberty® Flex Transcatheter Aortic Valve Retrievable and Steerable Delivery System for the Treatment of Severe Aortic Stenosis

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
232 (estimated)
Sponsor
Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled clinical study designed to evaluate the real-world performance of the VitaFlow Liberty® Flex Transcatheter Aortic Valve Retrievable and Steerable Delivery System (Investigational Device) for treating severe aortic stenosis (AS) in challenging anatomies. The study will compare it against the VitaFlow Liberty® Retrievable Delivery System (Control Device), which lacks steerability. Key Study Elements: Objective: The primary objective is to assess the device's performance using the incidence of a composite endpoint before hospital discharge. This endpoint includes permanent pacemaker implantation (PPI), valve-in-valve (ViV) implantation, or moderate-to-severe paravalvular leakage (PVL). Design: A prospective, multicenter RCT with 1:1 randomization (Experimental: VitaFlow Liberty® Flex vs. Control: VitaFlow Liberty®). Approximately 15 sites in China will participate. Subjects undergo follow-up at discharge, 30 days, and 1 year post-procedure. An independent data center handles management and analysis. Population: Patients with severe AS (echo confirmed: peak velocity ≥4.0 m/s, mean gradient ≥40 mmHg, or AVA ≤1.0 cm²/AVAi ≤0.6 cm²/m²) AND preoperative CTA showing a challenging aortic-left ventricular angle \>60°. NYHA class ≥II is required. Devices: Investigational: VitaFlow Liberty® Flex (Retrievable \& Steerable Delivery System - Models DSRS21/24/27/30/A series; Loading Tools LT-S series). Control: VitaFlow Liberty® (Retrievable Delivery System - Models DSR21/24/27/30; Loading Tools LT series). Endpoints: Primary: Composite of PPI, ViV, or moderate-to-severe PVL before discharge. Secondary: Include individual components of the primary endpoint (ViV, PVL) immediately post-procedure, procedural success (VARC-3), technical assistance rates, valve retrievals, implantation depth, arch/valve crossing performance, valve hemodynamics (gradient, area, leak, LVEF), NYHA class, Major Adverse Cardiac and Cerebrovascular Events (MACCE - all-cause death, MI, stroke, reoperation), major vascular complications (at discharge/30 days). Key Inclusion: Severe AS, challenging anatomy (aortic-LV angle \>60°), NYHA ≥II, informed consent. Key Exclusions: Device/contrast allergies, anticoagulant intolerance, active infection, severe vascular disease prohibiting access, ascending aorta ≥55mm, unsuitable aortic root anatomy, intracardiac mass/thrombus, recent MI (\<30 days), severe concomitant mitral/tricuspid regurgitation, cardiogenic shock, severe LV dysfunction (LVEF\<20%), hematologic abnormalities, pregnancy/breastfeeding, participation in other device trials. Visits: Screening (≤30d pre-op), Procedure (intra-op to 24h post-op), Discharge (≤7d post-op), 30d Follow-up (±7d), 12m Telephone FU (±1m). Sample Size: Planned enrollment of 232 subjects (116 per group), calculated for superiority testing. Based on an expected composite endpoint rate of 21% for the Flex system vs. a historical rate of 38% for non-steerable systems (Superiority margin Δ1=0%, one-sided α=2.5%, Power=80%, accounting for 5% dropout). Purpose: This study aims to demonstrate the superiority of the retrievable and steerable VitaFlow Liberty® Flex delivery system in reducing the composite rate of key adverse events (PPI, ViV, significant PVL) at discharge compared to the non-steerable system, specifically in patients with severe AS and anatomically challenging aortic-left ventricular angles.

Detailed description

A Prospective, Multicenter, Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial Evaluating the VitaFlow Liberty® Flex Transcatheter Aortic Valve Retrievable and Steerable Delivery System for Severe Aortic Stenosis in Challenging Anatomies 1. Study Rationale and Objective Severe aortic stenosis (AS) carries significant morbidity and mortality when untreated. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has emerged as a standard therapy, yet complex aortic anatomies - particularly steep aortic-left ventricular (LV) angles - present technical challenges during valve delivery, potentially leading to suboptimal deployment, paravalvular leak (PVL), conduction disturbances requiring permanent pacemaker implantation (PPI), or valve-in-valve (ViV) placement. The VitaFlow Liberty® Flex Delivery System addresses this with its retrievable and steerable catheter technology designed for enhanced navigability. This prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled trial (RCT) aims to evaluate the real-world superiority of the investigational VitaFlow Liberty® Flex System versus the non-steerable VitaFlow Liberty® System in patients with severe AS and challenging anatomies (aortic-LV angle \>60°). The primary objective is to compare the incidence of a composite safety endpoint (PPI, ViV implantation, or moderate-to-severe PVL) before hospital discharge. 2. Study Design Type: Prospective, multicenter, open-label, 1:1 randomized controlled superiority trial Randomization: Centralized electronic system Blinding: Unblinded (procedural nature precludes blinding) Study Arms: Experimental: VitaFlow Liberty® Flex TAVR System (Retrievable \& Steerable) Control: VitaFlow Liberty® TAVR System (Retrievable, Non-Steerable) Follow-up Schedule: Pre-discharge (≤7 days post-op) 30 days (±7 days) 12 months (±1 month, telephone) Oversight: Independent Clinical Events Committee (CEC), Data Monitoring Committee (DMC), and Core Laboratories for imaging/ECG analysis Centers: \~15 experienced TAVR centers across China 3\. Investigational and Control Devices Device Component:VitaFlow Liberty® FLEX (Investigational) VitaFlow Liberty® (Control) Delivery System Type:Retrievable \& Steerable(Investigational) Retrievable (Non-Steerable)(Control) 4\. Study Population Diagnosis: Severe symptomatic AS confirmed by echocardiography: Peak aortic velocity ≥4.0 m/s OR Mean gradient ≥40 mmHg OR Aortic valve area (AVA) ≤1.0 cm² (or AVAi ≤0.6 cm²/m²) Anatomical Inclusion: Pre-op CT angiography (CTA) with 3D reconstruction demonstrating aortic-LV angle \>60° (validating challenging anatomy). Symptoms: NYHA Functional Class ≥II. Key Exclusion Criteria: Allergy to device materials (nitinol), contrast, or antiplatelets/anticoagulants Active infection/endocarditis Severe vascular disease prohibiting access Ascending aorta diameter ≥55mm Unsuitable aortic root anatomy (e.g., heavy calcification affecting expansion) Intracardiac thrombus/mass Recent MI (\<30 days) Severe mitral/tricuspid regurgitation LVEF \<20% Hematologic disorders (leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, coagulopathy) Pregnancy or concurrent device trials 5\. Endpoints Primary Endpoint: Composite of PPI, ViV implantation, or moderate-to-severe PVL before discharge. Secondary Endpoints: Procedural: ViV rate (immediate post-op) Moderate-to-severe PVL (immediate post-op) Technical assistance crossing rate Valve retrieval attempts Valve implantation depth Arch/valve crossing performance Procedural success (VARC-3 criteria\*) Clinical: PPI rate (discharge, 30 days) MACCE\*\* (discharge, 30 days): All-cause death, MI, stroke, reoperation Major vascular complications Hemodynamic/Echocardiographic: Valve orifice area, mean gradient, peak velocity Degree of stenosis/regurgitation LVEF (immediate, discharge, 30 days) Functional: NYHA Class improvement (discharge, 30 days) \*VARC-3: Valve Academic Research Consortium-3 criteria for technical success. \*\*MACCE: Major Adverse Cardiac and Cerebrovascular Events. 6\. Statistical Analysis \& Sample Size Hypothesis: Superiority of VitaFlow Liberty® Flex Assumptions: Historical composite endpoint rate (non-steerable systems): 38% Expected composite rate (steerable system): 21% Superiority margin (Δ1): 0% Power: 80% \| One-sided α: 2.5% \| Dropout: 5% Sample Size: 232 subjects (116 per arm) Analysis: Primary endpoint: Chi-square/Fisher's exact test Secondary endpoints: Mixed-effects models accounting for site variability Subgroup analyses: Valve size, center volume, baseline aortic-LV angle 7\. Study Procedures Screening (≤30 days pre-op): Echocardiography, CTA, NYHA assessment, informed consent. Procedure: TAVR under standard anesthesia. Randomization pre-insertion. Discharge (≤7 days): Echo, ECG, NYHA, MACCE/vascular complication assessment. 30-Day Visit: Clinical exam, echo, ECG, lab tests, NYHA, MACCE. 12-Month Follow-up: Telephone assessment for mortality/MACCE. 8\. Ethical \& Regulatory Considerations Approved by institutional review boards (IRBs) at all sites. Conducted per ICH-GCP, Declaration of Helsinki, and Chinese regulatory requirements. Independent DMC reviews safety data quarterly. 9\. Significance and Innovation This trial addresses a critical unmet need in TAVR: improving outcomes in patients with challenging aortic anatomies. If superiority is demonstrated, the steerable delivery system may become the preferred option for: Reducing PPI rates (linked to anatomical precision) Mitigating PVL (via optimal deployment) Avoiding ViV (through recapture/repositioning) Enhancing first-attempt success in tortuous anatomies Conclusion: This rigorously designed RCT will provide Level A evidence on the clinical utility of steerable TAVR technology in high-risk anatomies, potentially establishing a new standard for managing complex AS patients.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICETranscatheter Aortic Valve ReplacementTranscatheter Aortic Valve Implantation/Replacement (TAVI/TAVR) has gradually emerged as a new treatment option for patients with severe aortic stenosis who are ineligible for open-heart valve replacement or at high surgical risk.

Timeline

Start date
2025-07-30
Primary completion
2026-08-31
Completion
2027-12-31
First posted
2025-08-28
Last updated
2025-08-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07145463. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.