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Sharma G, Akkineni KP, Makkar N, et al. Tenecteplase vs Alteplase in Mechanical Prosthetic Heart Valve Thrombosis: The TENET Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Cardiol. 2025 Dec 3. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2025.4369. (Original study)
Abstract

IMPORTANCE: For patients presenting with symptomatic prosthetic valve thrombosis (PVT) after mechanical heart valve replacement, thrombolytic therapy with alteplase is accepted as a first-line therapeutic alternative. The utility of tenecteplase compared with conventional regimens remains unstudied, to the authors' knowledge, in this patient population.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the relative safety and efficacy of tenecteplase compared with standard infusions of alteplase in patients with PVT.

DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: This was an open-label, parallel-group, non-inferiority randomized clinical trial among consecutive adult patients presenting with obstructive PVT of a mechanical prosthetic valve over the study period from October 2022 to August 2024 to a single tertiary care center in India.

INTERVENTIONS: Patients received thrombolytic therapy with a low-dose slow infusion alteplase or weight-based bolus doses of tenecteplase.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcomes were to determine the rates of complete thrombolytic success and the incidence of major complications.

RESULTS: A total of 83 patients (mean [SD] age, 39.6 [12.4] years, 42 male [50.6%]) were randomized to receive alteplase (n = 43) or tenecteplase (n = 40). The rates of the primary efficacy end point (complete thrombolytic success) were significantly higher (risk ratio, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.03-1.39; P = .02 for noninferiority) in the tenecteplase group (39 patients [97.5%]) compared with the alteplase group (35 patients [81.5%]). Additionally, patients treated with tenecteplase had higher rates of complete success with the first administered dose and a shorter duration of hospital stay (median [IQR], 4.1 [3.2-5.1] days vs 6.5 [4.3-9.2] days; P < .001). The rates of major and minor adverse events were similar.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Tenecteplase may be a safe and effective alternative to alteplase in patients presenting with obstructive PVT. Patients treated with tenecteplase in our study had higher rates of complete thrombolytic success and a shorter duration of hospital stay. Furthermore, the relative ease of drug administration with tenecteplase may translate to greater clinical benefit in a real-world setting.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical Trials Registry of India: CTRI/2022/10/046127.

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Physician rater

Very interesting results, but the sample size of the comparison cohorts seems too low to make firm conclusions. This study needs replication in other settings.
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