
CMS Okays Coverage of Tricuspid TEER, With Caveats
On July 2, CMS agreed to cover T-TEER for the treatment of tricuspid regurgitation but only through the coverage with evidence development process, which requires procedures to be performed as part of a CMS-approved study.
Some comments solicited during the decision process raised concerns T-TEER has not shown clinically meaningful benefit and that the TRILUMINATE pivotal trial did not show a decrease in mortality, tricuspid valve surgeries, or overall hospitalizations compared to medical therapy.
'While we agree that there are evidence gaps that still need to be addressed regarding T-TEER, we believe the evidence overall, while insufficient, is promising enough to allow coverage with evidence development,' CMS said in announcing its decision.
The study criteria — all-cause mortality and hospitalizations through a minimum of 24 months — 'strike the appropriate balance between evidence generation and patient access,' the agency said.
The patient must have symptomatic tricuspid regurgitation despite optimal medical therapy and be under the care of a heart team that includes a cardiac surgeon, an interventional cardiologist, a heart failure specialist, and an interventional echocardiographer.
Shamir Mehta, MD, cardiologist at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and an investigator on TRILUMINATE, said the trial provided evidence of benefit. 'The trial showed improvements in quality of life, and that's an important outcome from the patients' perspective,' Mehta said.
And TRILUMINATE did see a reduction in heart failure hospitalization at 2 years, he noted. 'Maybe over the longer term, we begin to see that correlating with a reduction in tricuspid regurgitation,' he said.
Mehta acknowledged some of the criticisms of TRILUMINATE were valid but said the main issue was some of the assumptions underlying the trial turned out not to be correct. Prior to TRILUMINATE, right heart failure and tricuspid regurgitation were understudied, so the study and the subsequent TRISCEND II trial were designed using the same paradigm for reduction in events that are used for left-sided heart failure, he said.
'We made an assumption that the same outcomes that we observed in mitral regurgitation would also apply to patients with right heart failure,' he said. 'Maybe, the outcomes that we should be looking at with right-sided heart failure should be different.'
Patients with left-sided heart failure tend to present with pulmonary edema and require hospitalisation for acute heart failure. While those with right-sided heart failure accumulate fluid in the periphery and are often not admitted to hospital but treated in the clinic with diuretics and develop and are admitted for other complications such as renal failure.
'There are two types of heart failure, and they can present in very different ways,' Mehta said.
The trials that will be conducted under the CED process should help to clarify those differences, and lead to a better understanding of when T-TEER is the right choice for a patient. 'This is an evolving area and we're learning more as we have more randomized trials,' he said.
Mehta is an investigator on the TRILUMINATE and CLASP TR trials.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
You Said ‘Yes' to Being an Organ Donor. What Exactly Does That Mean?
If there is a small red heart with the words 'organ donor' at the bottom of your driver's license, that puts you in a group of over 173 million Americans who are in the national organ donor registry. Organ donation has wide public support, but medical ethicists say there is still confusion about what it looks like and how it affects patients and families. How do you become an organ donor? Any adult can register. In most states, teenagers as young as 15 may also express their intent to donate, though parents can revoke that decision. Today, around 90 percent of donors join their state registry at their local D.M.V. Others sign up while registering to vote, or through an online form linked to their local organ procurement organizations, known as O.P.O.s, which are nonprofit federal contractors in each state that coordinate transplants. Donate Life America, an advocacy organization, maintains a nationwide list of online registries. Donors can sign up or change their status at the D.M.V. or online, though residents of some states have had trouble removing themselves from the registry. Is the decision legally binding? It depends on how you die. If you are declared legally dead after testing shows no signs of neurological activity — known colloquially as being 'brain-dead' — then the organ donor status on your license is legally binding, even if your family disagrees. In these cases, patients are kept on a ventilator until their organs are retrieved. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
A Push for More Organ Transplants Is Putting Donors at Risk
Last spring at a small Alabama hospital, a team of transplant surgeons prepared to cut into Misty Hawkins. The clock was ticking. Her organs wouldn't be usable for much longer. Days earlier, she had been a vibrant 42-year-old with a playful sense of humor and a love for the Thunder Beach Motorcycle Rally. But after Ms. Hawkins choked while eating and fell into a coma, her mother decided to take her off life support and donate her organs. She was removed from a ventilator and, after 103 minutes, declared dead. A surgeon made an incision in her chest and sawed through her breastbone. That's when the doctors discovered her heart was beating. She appeared to be breathing. They were slicing into Ms. Hawkins while she was alive. Across the United States, an intricate system of hospitals, doctors and nonprofit donation coordinators carries out tens of thousands of lifesaving transplants each year. At every step, it relies on carefully calibrated protocols to protect both donors and recipients. But in recent years, as the system has pushed to increase transplants, a growing number of patients have endured premature or bungled attempts to retrieve their organs. Though Ms. Hawkins's case is an extreme example of what can go wrong, a New York Times examination revealed a pattern of rushed decision-making that has prioritized the need for more organs over the safety of potential donors. Share your story about the organ transplant system We will not publish any part of your submission without contacting you first. We may use your contact information to follow up with you. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
CVS Health's (CVS) Dividend Outlook: Can the Retail-Pharma Giant Deliver in 2025?
CVS Health Corporation (NYSE:CVS) is included among the 14 Best Pharma Dividend Stocks to Buy in 2025. A row of shelves in a retail pharmacy, demonstrating the variety of drugs and over-the-counter products. CVS Health Corporation (NYSE:CVS)'s retail pharmacy business may be widely recognized, but it represents just a small portion of its broader business. The company also runs a top-tier pharmacy benefits management division and owns Aetna, a major player in the health insurance space. Although CVS Health Corporation (NYSE:CVS)'s stock took a significant hit last year, it has rebounded this year. The stock has surged by over 43% since the start of 2025. The company also reported strong earnings in the first quarter of 2025, with revenues coming in at $94.6 billion. The revenue showed a 7% growth from the same period last year and also beat analysts' estimates by $1.22 billion. CVS Health Corporation (NYSE:CVS) also posted a solid cash position with an operating cash flow of $4.6 billion. The company increased its operating cash flow forecast from around $6.5 billion to roughly $7.0 billion. This cash position has enabled the company to pay uninterrupted dividends to shareholders since 1997. Currently, it offers a quarterly dividend of $0.665 per share and has a dividend yield of 4.20%, as of July 17. While we acknowledge the potential of CVS as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: and . Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data