At TCT 2025, Dr Nadira Hamid (Minneapolis Heart Institute, US) and Dr. Rahul P. Sharma (Stanford University, US) review the late-breaking trial data shaping the future of structural heart disease.
The discussion highlights real-world results from TRISCEND and TRILUMINATE in tricuspid disease, 7-year PARTNER 3 durability outcomes in TAVR, national prevalence insights from the PREVUE-VALVE study, and new frontiers in mitral intervention with SUMMIT MAC. Together, they examine what the evidence...
At TCT 2025, Dr Nadira Hamid (Minneapolis Heart Institute, US) and Dr. Rahul P. Sharma (Stanford University, US) review the late-breaking trial data shaping the future of structural heart disease.
The discussion highlights real-world results from TRISCEND and TRILUMINATE in tricuspid disease, 7-year PARTNER 3 durability outcomes in TAVR, national prevalence insights from the PREVUE-VALVE study, and new frontiers in mitral intervention with SUMMIT MAC. Together, they examine what the evidence means for safety, durability, patient selection, and clinical adoption.
01:05 – Tricuspid Therapies
Late-breaking data from Triluminate (TriClip) and Tricend/Evoke: real-world outcomes, bleeding reduction, pacemaker trends, and patient selection.
06:40 – Aortic Valve Durability
PARTNER 7-year outcomes: TAVR vs. SAVR, valve performance over time, implications for younger/lower-risk patients, and evolving device technology.
12:55 – Valvular Disease Prevalence
Insights from the PREVUE-VALVE: first nationwide prevalence data, under-treatment of severe disease, and role of AI in early detection.
17:30 – Mitral Valve Advances
Landmark trials: SUMMIT Trial (MAC population) and first-in-human Sapien M3 transseptal TMVR. Key outcomes, screen failure rates, and implications for clinical adoption.
24:50 – Future of Structural Heart Interventions
Patient-first approach, expanding treatment options, and importance of durability and early diagnosis.
For more content from TCT 2025 head to the Late-breaking Science Video Collection.
Editor: Mirjam Boros
Videographer: Tom Green and Dan Brent
Support: This is an independent video produced by Radcliffe Cardiology.
View more