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Off-label closure during CLOSURE study.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The role of percutaneous closure of patent foramen ovale (PFO) in patients
with cryptogenic stroke or transient ischemic attack remains controversial. Registry
data have suggested considerable benefit of closure over medical therapy, but the
prospective, randomized CLOSURE I trial found no benefit for device closure. METHODS:
We compared patients enrolled into CLOSURE I to off-label closures performed during
the study recruitment period at a single large institution and prospectively enrolled
into an institutional registry of PFO closure. We also compared CLOSURE I patients
at our institution to the reported characteristics of the entire study to ensure generalizability.
RESULTS: Between 11/3/2003 and 4/16/2007, there were 100 off-label closures and 33
patients randomized into CLOSURE I. Compared with off-label closure, patients in CLOSURE
I were younger (41.6 ± 10.1 years vs 50.0 ± 14.0 years; P<.001) and had fewer cardiovascular
risks including hypertension (12% vs 36%; P=.009), hyperlipidemia (24% vs 53%; P=.008),
and coronary disease (3% vs 44%; P<.001). Degree of right-to-left shunting was considerably
higher in off-label closures (28%, 14%, and 58% vs 45%, 30%, and 25% for mild, moderate,
and severe, respectively; P=.026). CONCLUSION: Off-label closures outnumbered patient
recruitment into CLOSURE 3:1 at our institution during study recruitment. Certain
demographic differences were expected (age over 60 was an exclusion for CLOSURE I),
but vascular risks were considerably greater in the off-label group and may be important
mechanistically. Large shunts were considerably more common in off-label patients,
suggesting that higher-risk patients may have been preferentially closed off-label.
These results suggest that the results of CLOSURE I may not apply to all patients
with initial cryptogenic stroke.
Type
Journal articleSubject
AdultCardiac Catheterization
Foramen Ovale, Patent
Hematologic Agents
Humans
Ischemic Attack, Transient
Middle Aged
Off-Label Use
Prospective Studies
Prosthesis Implantation
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Registries
Risk Factors
Stroke
Treatment Outcome
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Richard Andrew Krasuski
Professor of Medicine
Dr. Richard Krasuski is Director of the Adult Congenital Heart Center at Duke University
Medical Center, the Director of Hemodynamic Research, and the Medical Director of
the CTEPH Program. He is considered a thought leader in the fields of pulmonary hypertension
and congenital heart disease. His research focus is in epidemiologic and clinical
studies involving patients with pulmonary hypertension and patients with congenital
heart disease. He is involved in multiple multicenter studies thr

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