Description
Cardiac interventricular septal reduction therapies – to relieve left ventricular outflow tract obstruction from transcatheter valve replacement or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy – have inherent limitations including dependence on coronary anatomy, high pacemaker implantation rate, and surgical morbidity. We developed a novel transcatheter ventricular myotomy called SEptal Scoring Along the Midline Endocardium (SESAME) that relies on intramyocardial guidewire navigation and transcatheter electrosurgery. SESAME has been performed on a small number of patients using off label devices.
This study systematically characterizes the safety and early feasibility of SESAME at 1 enrolling site. SESAME is performed as septal reduction therapy in a heterogeneous group of subjects, including symptomatic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and resting or provoked left ventricular outflow obstruction (LVOTO); and severe symptomatic mitral and/or aortic valve disease at high risk of standard heart surgical therapy and requiring later transcatheter heart valve implantation combined with manifest or potential LVOTO.
A key goal of this study is to attempt to capture generalizable knowledge from as many patients as possible, and to add a limited number of research procedures to characterize the safety and provisional effectiveness of SESAME. Absent realistic non-clinical models of HCM or LVH combined with aortomitral disease, we believe little more information can be gleaned without clinical investigation.