‘Heart
Stopping ‘
Issue 2940
October 28th
‘Would you
have an operation to fix a hole in your heart even though no one is sure if the
benefits outweigh the risks ?’
The facts
1 in 4 of us
is walking around with septal defects (a type of congenital heart disease) it
can lead to strokes, migraines, decompression sickness in divers and perhaps
other issues.
Strokes
occur as blood leaks through the hole in the heart bypasses the lungs, where
small blood clots would normally be filtered out. This means the clots may end
up reaching the brain (or other parts of the body) potentially triggering a
stroke.
It is
relatively easy to fix the hole surgically so why do we not fix more people’s
hearts?
That is what
doctors cannot agree on, some argue that the operation does more harm than good;
the condition has potentially devastating consequences. So why is such a heart
problem with such potential devastating conditions so common?
The septal
defects are a result of our time in the womb during which the blood flows by
the completely different route. An unborn baby doesn’t use its lungs to breathe
it instead gets all its oxygen through the placentae. As a result a fetal heart
has an opening between the right and left upper chambers (atrial) known as the
foramen ovale to bypass the lungs? When the baby is born and takes its first
breaths, a flap closes over the hole- at least in most people. For about one in
four of us however the hole stays open, either all the time or more commonly it
gapes open when the pressure rises in the chest, such as during a coughing fit,
or straining to defecate (hahaha) or when lifting something heavy. This is
known as a patent (open) foramen ovale or PFO and is shown the the picture
bellow. Remember that these septal defects caused by the foramen ovale as
specific to holes in the atrial (atrial septal defects).

While having
little initial effect upon the day to day life of a sufferer doctors worry that
this hole allows things to sneak through which would normally be filtered out
be the lungs, things such as blood clots. Normally small blood clots get stuck
in the lungs and dissolve harmlessly however, should the clot pass by the
lungs, it might lodge in a blood vessel elsewhere in the body, maybe the brain
causing a stroke after all the leading cause of strokes is blockage of blood
flow.
Strokes are
an especial public health problem. One in five of us will suffer a stroke in
our life time and they are the current cause of disability in the western world
(with depression coming a close second).
The evidence
or the linking of congenital heart disease and strokes first mounted in the
1990s when various studies suggested that arterial septal defects are present
in 40% to 60% of people who had unexplained strokes. It is also important to remember
that only 25% of the population is thought to have PFO which has led to many
leading stroke experts to believe that PFO must somehow play a role.
The
detection of a PFO is easy once you suspect that it is there. A vein in the
subjects arm is injected with tiny bubbles, too small to do any harm. The
microbubbles travel to the heart where the can be imaged using ultrasound.
Patients are asked to hold their breath and bear down forcing the flap open. If
the bubbles can be imaged passing to the lungs then the Foramen ovale has
naturally shut and all is well. However should the bubble be detected traveling
to the left side of the heart then it suggest that the PFO is still open (it
could also be the result of a ventricular septal defect however this is diagnosed
most often by a heart murmur).
The first
reaction of many when a hole in such a vital organ is found is often to plug
it. This used to mean open heart surgery, but medicine has moved on and devices
have been devolved that can close the heart without the need for the opening of
the chest. One such device is shaped like a tiny umbrella which is pushed into
the groin, threaded up into the heart by a wire, then opened up and left in
place while the wire is withdrawn. Eventually, tissue grows over it, thus
sealing the flap.
As the
confidence in the safety of this operation in PFO closure grew it became
increasingly offered to people who had, had unexplained strokes, in hope of
reducing their chance of having another stroke. Note that this would be as well
as or instead of the standard treatment of blood-thinning medicines or other
drug treatments. Yet unlike the drugs, no trials have been done to demonstrate
the operation would achieve the intended goal, and doctor’s opinions differed
about how often the procedure should be carried out. The most enthusiastic tend
to be the cardiologists who carry out the procedure perhaps influenced by their
close relationship with the manufactures of the device.
Soon the
closure became an operation for divers too, after research revealed that people
who are prone to decompression sickness are more likely to have large or
permanently open flaps.. Divers get the bends when bubbles of nitrogen form in
the blood as they ascend, leading to symptoms ranging from itching and joint
pain to strokes and paralysis. Normally the nitrogen is gradually breathed out
through the lungs, as long as the divers ascend slowly enough. In people with
PFO’s the bubbles might bypass the lungs, making the bends more likely as the
diver struggles up a ladder with wet heavy kit on.
Patent
foramen ovales were also suspect of causing migraines, specifically the kind
accompanied by strange visual disturbances known as aura. People who get
migraines with aura are twice as likely to have PFO as the rest of the
population and about six times as likely to have a large opening. Although the
cause of migraines is unknown is unknown the current theory is that a PFO
allows whatever causes migraines is allowed to bypass the lungs and reach the
brain. Doctors found that migraines with aura tended to disappear in people-le
who had their PFO closed for other reasons.
So a trial
was set up. Funded by Starflex a company that was the producer of a new closure
device (that’s was a good idea I’m sure they didn’t have any personal interest
on the results of the trail). It was the first large trial to test PFO closure
against people having shame operations. In this trial patients who had, had the
trail were compared with those who experienced a placebo- they were put under a
general antithetic and an incision made. This in fact was the first large scale
study of its kind which had involved a placebo group, where both the patients
and the doctors who assessed the outcomes were kept in the dark about whether
patients had, had the real operation or not. The results did not show the
outcome wanted. Not only did the data show that the device failed to stop
people having migraines, but it also caused a higher rate of heart problems
than you would expect with this procedure; in two cases the device came loose
in the heart, which could have been fatal.
The trial
was also the centre of a libel case against one of the principle investigators,
Peter Wilmshurst. At a cardiology conference, Wilmshurst said to a reporter
that in some patients, the device may not have completely close their PFO’s and
that there were flaws in the way that the trial was conducted. See link http://www.theguardian.com/science/2010/dec/01/company-suing-peter-wilmshurst-libel
Starflex’s
manufacture NMT Medical sued, in case Wilmshurst’s comments helped spur the
on-going campaign to reform UK libel law. Fortunately for Wilmshurst, the
company went bankrupt before the case could reach court. Wilmshurst said on the
matter ‘‘ We need to take into account both the benefit of the closure and the
risk’’ ‘’ Often there is little or no benefit and a significant risk ‘’ . After
all no surgical procedure is completely safe, during PFO closure there is an
estimated 1 in 100 chance of complications. That maybe not seem like much but
if you did 1000 operations then it is likely that you would have 100 people for
that group how experienced complications which could range from bruising or damage
of the blood vessels to the device falling out. There is even the risk that the
operation could trigger another stroke, if a blood clot or air bubble travels
through the PFO as the device is pushed through.
The migraine
trial also highlights problems with the industry in a wider context. Medical
device manufactures, unlike drug companies do not have to prove that their
products work all they have to pass is a safety test. In the US medical devices
are subject to the same trials that drug companies have to comply to but as
seen in the article ‘rethinking depression’ the companies still don’t have to
publish the results of negative trials. However in the US there is much more
‘’off label’’ use where devices are used despite not having gone through the official
approval process for that particular kind of operation. Doctors in the US tend
to be more gung ho about medical inovations than there UK counter parts which
could help explain why the US carries out some 8000 patent foramen ovale
closures a year, which is more than 10 times the UK numbers despite having 5 times the population.
It is
believed that the best way to resolve uncertainties over the procedures risks
and benefits are further randomised trials. In January of 2013 only one trial
had been published involving Starflex , this trial found no significant
difference between the rate of subsequent strokes after surgical or drug
treatment. There were criticisms however that the studies design meant that it
could have underestimated the benefits of the intervention. Since then only two
further trials have been published and even the most favourable could be taken
as evidence to both support of criticises the procedure depending on which ways
the data was crunched.
‘If the
patent Forman ovale closure device were a drug we would just walk away ‘says
neurologist Clay Johnston of the University of California SF. At the moment all
doctors can do is to perform the surgery on those who most need it, which is
determined by questioning patients closely to see if they have another risk
factors that could have caused there stroke.
In the UK,
official guidelines now say that the operation should only take place at a few
specialist centres that keep good records, so that the resulting data can be
pooled. While this is not a randomised trial it still provides much needed data
on the individuals who have the procedure and the outcomes that the procedure
has on their health.
This case
has brought to our attention that some of the products for which we use in potentially
lifesaving operations we need definitive evidence from bigger and better trials
about the effects and the outcomes that they have in a much wider and transparent
environment.
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