Friday, July 3, 2026

June 2026 in Cardiology: TAVI's Decade Mark, a New CKM Guideline, and a Gene-Editing First
Cardiology Monthly Roundup — June 2026

June 2026 in Cardiology: TAVI's Decade Mark, a New CKM Guideline, and a Gene-Editing First

A synthesis of the month's highest-yield structural, preventive, and antiplatelet news for practicing cardiologists and physician-investors.

Overview

June is traditionally a quieter month on the conference calendar than May, yet the past four weeks produced an unusually dense cluster of practice-relevant data.

Roughly half of the most-read stories from the period trace back to New York Valves 2026, where transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) durability, futility, and reimbursement all took center stage.

Beyond the valve world, a first-ever cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome guideline, an early but genuinely novel gene-editing therapy for LDL lowering, a practice-shaping antiplatelet meta-analysis, and a small but intriguing vitamin K trial rounded out the list.

This roundup pulls the clinical threads together and flags where physician-investors may want to keep an eye on the corporate side of the story.

TAVI at 10 Years: Reassuring, With Caveats

Two analyses published in the June 16, 2026 issue of JACC gave cardiologists their longest look yet at TAVI versus surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR).

In the overall 10-year cohort, all-cause mortality was numerically higher after TAVI than SAVR (86.1% vs 82.8%; HR 1.13), a difference attributed largely to the older, higher-risk population that received TAVI in earlier device generations.

Notably, a propensity-matched comparison restricted to the third-generation Sapien 3 valve (Edwards Lifesciences) against contemporary SAVR patients from PARTNER 2A did not show this gap, suggesting that modern valve design and CT-based procedural planning have narrowed the durability question considerably.

Follow-up completeness remains an important limitation, since only about 62% of TAVI patients and 54% of SAVR patients had directly reported 10-year data before a supplemental vital-status sweep filled in the rest.

Extending TAVI to Asymptomatic Disease

The most closely watched update at New York Valves 2026 was the 5-year analysis of the EARLY TAVR trial, which randomized patients with asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis to prompt transfemoral TAVI or clinical surveillance.

Death and stroke curves were essentially identical between arms through the first 2 years, reinforcing the trial's original conclusion that early intervention carries no early safety penalty.

That evidence base is already reshaping coverage policy: the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has proposed expanding national TAVI coverage to asymptomatic patients, with a final ruling expected in September 2026.

The proposed decision memo would also allow triaging by chart review and give heart teams greater flexibility in documenting shared decision-making, a change that has direct workflow implications for structural programs.

This coverage expansion follows a May 2025 FDA approval of an expanded Sapien 3 indication for asymptomatic disease, a request originally submitted by Edwards Lifesciences as the EARLY TAVR trial sponsor.

Durability Through 7 Years in Low-Risk Patients

A separate late-breaking session paired new randomized and real-world data showing TAVI durability out to 7 years in low-surgical-risk patients treated with balloon-expandable valves.

Investigators described the findings as reassuring for current practice, while cautioning that even longer follow-up is still needed before extending TAVI further down the age and risk spectrum.

Complementary presentations covered the self-expanding Evolut platform (Medtronic) and small-annulus outcomes with the Navitor valve (Abbott), broadening the durability picture beyond a single device family.

Weighing Futility After a "Successful" TAVI

Not every headline was reassuring: new registry data from TRITAVI found that roughly 1 in 25 patients died between 30 days and 12 months after an otherwise uncomplicated TAVI.

Most of these deaths were noncardiovascular, and COPD, atrial fibrillation, severe chronic kidney disease, and reduced ejection fraction were the strongest independent predictors.

Investigators framed the finding as a useful, if sobering, data point for shared decision-making conversations about futility rather than a reason to withhold treatment broadly.

10-Year All-Cause Mortality: Overall Cohort 86.1% TAVI 82.8% SAVR HR 1.13 (95% CI 1.02–1.25); driven largely by earlier-generation valves and higher-risk baseline cohort
Figure 1. Unadjusted 10-year mortality, overall TAVI vs SAVR cohort (JACC, June 16, 2026). The gap narrowed substantially in a propensity-matched Sapien 3-only comparison.
2017–2024
EARLY TAVR enrolls 901 asymptomatic severe AS patients
2024
Primary results published; changes perception of asymptomatic AS management
May 2025
FDA expands Sapien 3 indication to asymptomatic AS
Jun 2026
5-year data show sustained death/stroke equivalence at 2 years
Sep 2026*
CMS final coverage ruling expected
Figure 2. Pathway from trial to coverage policy for asymptomatic severe AS. *Projected date per proposed CMS decision memo.

TAVI Headlines at a Glance

StoryKey MetricPractice Signal
10-year TAVI vs SAVR86.1% vs 82.8% mortality (HR 1.13)Gap narrows with modern Sapien 3-era practice
EARLY TAVR, 5-yearEquivalent death/stroke at 2 yearsSupports earlier intervention in asymptomatic AS
7-year durability, low riskReassuring across RCT + real-world dataLonger follow-up still needed
TRITAVI registry4% die between 30 days–12 monthsInforms futility, shared decision-making
CMS coverage proposalDecision expected September 2026Would expand access, ease heart-team documentation burden

First-Ever CKM Syndrome Guideline

Away from the valve, the AHA and ACC, together with the American Diabetes Association and American Society of Nephrology, issued the first comprehensive guideline on cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome.

The document introduces a four-stage framework, ranging from isolated risk factors (Stage 1) to established cardiovascular disease with concurrent metabolic or kidney disease (Stage 4).

Central to the guideline is broader use of the PREVENT risk equations, which incorporate kidney and metabolic variables to estimate 10- and 30-year cardiovascular risk more precisely than legacy pooled-cohort tools.

Nearly 90% of US adults have at least one CKM risk factor, underscoring how broadly this staging system is likely to apply in routine outpatient cardiology practice.

For heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction, the guideline reiterates SGLT2 inhibitors as first-line therapy and supports layering GLP-1–based agents in patients with obesity, alongside consideration of nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists in type 2 diabetes with chronic kidney disease.

A Gene-Editing First for PCSK9

In lipid-lowering news, interim phase I data from the Heart-2 trial showed that a single infusion of the in vivo base-editing therapy VERVE-102 reduced PCSK9 protein levels by up to 88% and LDL cholesterol by up to 62% (roughly a 78 mg/dL absolute reduction) at the highest dose.

The therapy uses a GalNAc-lipid nanoparticle carrier to deliver a base-editing complex to hepatocytes, permanently inactivating the PCSK9 gene through a single adenine-to-guanine DNA edit.

Tolerability was generally favorable, with infusion-related reactions in about 20% of patients and one serious but self-limited case of aspiration pneumonitis.

On the corporate side, Verve Therapeutics became a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company in July 2025, so the former Nasdaq ticker VERV has been delisted and the PCSK9 gene-editing program now sits inside Lilly's broader cardiometabolic pipeline.

A phase II study of VERVE-102 is expected to begin enrolling later in 2026, with familial hypercholesterolemia and premature coronary disease as the initial target populations.

Prasugrel Edges Out Rivals After PCI

A new meta-analysis published in JAMA Cardiology and summarized by TCTMD found that among the three major oral P2Y12 inhibitors, prasugrel offered the best overall balance of efficacy and safety after PCI.

Compared with clopidogrel, prasugrel lowered the risk of MACE, myocardial infarction, and stent thrombosis without a corresponding increase in major bleeding.

Compared with ticagrelor, prasugrel again showed lower MACE, MI, and stent thrombosis, while ticagrelor carried higher rates of major bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage.

These findings echo two prior randomized trials, ISAR-REACT 5 and TUXEDO-2, both of which leaned toward a prasugrel advantage over ticagrelor in appropriately selected post-PCI patients.

Vitamin K and Coronary Calcium: An Intriguing Signal

Finally, the Dutch VitaK-CAC trial randomized 180 patients with mild coronary calcification (Agatston scores 50–400) to daily menaquinone-7 (MK-7) supplementation or placebo.

Over 2 years, CAC score progression was significantly slower in the MK-7 group, and levels of dp-ucMGP, a vitamin K-dependent protein that inhibits vascular calcification, rose less steeply in that arm.

The annualized increase in CAC score was reduced by an estimated 19 Agatston units with MK-7 treatment relative to placebo.

Experts interviewed for the coverage were careful to note that the clinical significance of a smaller CAC increase remains uncertain, and that routine MK-7 supplementation is not yet ready for prime time outside of further confirmatory trials.

Drugs, Devices, and Companies in the News

Agent / DeviceGeneric / BrandCompany (Ticker)Notes
TAVI valveSapien 3 (balloon-expandable)Edwards Lifesciences (NYSE: EW)EARLY TAVR sponsor; ~$85–95/share range, consensus Buy
TAVI valveEvolut (self-expanding)Medtronic (NYSE: MDT)~$80–90/share range, consensus Buy
Structural heart / LAAOWatchman; MiRus valve stakeBoston Scientific (NYSE: BSX)Shares pulled back on Watchman guidance cuts; still consensus Buy
VERVE-102 (gene editing)In vivo PCSK9 base editorEli Lilly (NYSE: LLY)Former Verve Therapeutics (VERV) program; VERV delisted July 2025
P2Y12 inhibitorPrasugrel (Effient), generic availableMultiple generic manufacturersOff-patent; lowest-cost of the potent P2Y12 agents
P2Y12 inhibitorTicagrelor (Brilinta)AstraZeneca (Nasdaq: AZN)Twice-daily dosing; higher bleeding signal in new meta-analysis
Vitamin K2 supplementMenaquinone-7 (MenaQ7)Gnosis by LesaffrePrivately held; over-the-counter supplement, not FDA-regulated as a drug
Case Vignette

A 74-year-old man with hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and stage 3 chronic kidney disease is found to have severe aortic stenosis on a surveillance echocardiogram, without exertional symptoms on careful questioning.

He asks whether he should simply be monitored until symptoms develop, as his neighbor was advised a decade ago.

Applying the 5-year EARLY TAVR data, the cardiologist explains that early transfemoral TAVI has shown no penalty in death or stroke compared with surveillance through at least 2 years, and that pending CMS coverage changes may soon remove some of the administrative barriers to earlier intervention.

At the same visit, his CKM syndrome stage is formally documented as Stage 3, prompting initiation of an SGLT2 inhibitor and calculation of his 10-year PREVENT risk score to guide further risk-factor management.

Bottom Line

TAVI's evidence base continues to mature in two directions at once: reassuring long-term durability data at 7 and 10 years, and expanding indications into asymptomatic disease that will likely become easier to act on once CMS finalizes its coverage decision.

The new CKM syndrome guideline gives cardiologists a shared staging language with endocrinology and nephrology, anchored by the PREVENT risk equations.

VERVE-102 remains an early but genuinely novel proof of concept for one-time gene-editing therapy in lipid management, now under Eli Lilly's umbrella rather than as a standalone public company.

For routine post-PCI antiplatelet selection, the new meta-analysis adds further support for prasugrel as a first-choice potent P2Y12 inhibitor in patients without a specific contraindication.

Disclaimer: This article is intended for physician education and does not constitute individualized clinical guidance; treatment decisions should be based on current guidelines and individual patient assessment. Content referencing publicly traded companies is provided for general financial education only, does not constitute investment advice, and should not be relied upon for trading decisions; approximate share prices and analyst ratings are time-sensitive snapshots that may have changed since publication, and past performance does not guarantee future results. The author is not a licensed financial advisor.

References

  1. TCTMD. New 10-Year TAVI Data Generally 'Reassuring' But Highlight Challenges.
  2. TCTMD. AHA/ACC Release First Comprehensive Guideline on CKM Syndrome.
  3. TCTMD. Gene-Editing Therapy Safely Lowers PCSK9, LDL Cholesterol in Phase I: Heart-2.
  4. TCTMD. Meta-analysis: Prasugrel the Best P2Y12 Inhibitor After PCI?
  5. TCTMD. EARLY TAVR: 5-Year Data Still Support TAVI Over Surveillance in Asymptomatic AS.
  6. TCTMD. Following Successful TAVI, 4% Die Between 1 and 12 Months: TRITAVI.
  7. TCTMD. What's Going to Be Hot at New York Valves 2026.
  8. TCTMD. Vitamin K Supplementation May Reduce Coronary Calcification: VitaK-CAC.
  9. TCTMD. CMS Proposes Expanding TAVI Coverage to Asymptomatic Patients.
  10. American College of Cardiology. First-Ever Guideline Addresses CKM Syndrome.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Stunning the Appendage: Pre-Emptive Ablation May Cut Peridevice Leaks After LAAO
Structural Heart · Electrophysiology

Stunning the Appendage: Pre-Emptive Ablation May Cut Peridevice Leaks After LAAO

New nonrandomized data suggest that ablating the left atrial appendage before closure devices are deployed shrinks residual flow around the implant — and the physiologic story behind it is straightforward.

Cardiology & Physician-Investor Briefing · Updated July 2026

Peridevice leaks remain the most persistent nuisance in left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO) therapy despite a decade of device refinement.

A nonrandomized study called STUN-AF, presented at New York Valves 2026, offers a plausible fix.

Among 317 patients undergoing combined atrial fibrillation ablation and appendage closure, ablating the appendage itself before implanting the occluder nearly doubled the rate of complete appendage sealing by four months.

By one year, 96% of appendage-ablated patients had no detectable leak on imaging, compared with 58% of those who skipped the extra step.

Why Peridevice Leaks Matter

Roughly a quarter to a third of patients have some residual flow around a closure device on follow-up imaging, even with modern iterations like Watchman FLX Pro.

That residual flow is not a benign imaging footnote.

Pooled five-year follow-up from the original Watchman device trials found that patients with any leak up to 5 mm at one year had roughly double the risk of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism compared with patients whose appendages were fully sealed, an effect driven mainly by nondisabling strokes.

A separate meta-analysis using a strict CT definition of patency found that more than half of patients had some detectable flow behind the device at a mean of roughly five months, and patency tracked with higher thromboembolism and mortality.

The takeaway echoed by the presenting electrophysiologist was blunt: leaks are bad, and the goal of the procedure should be true anatomic obliteration, not just a leak below an arbitrary size cutoff.

The STUN-AF Hypothesis

Beyond anatomic mismatch between device and appendage, investigators suspected that residual mechanical contraction of the appendage itself was working against device healing.

A contracting appendage can create intermittent flow around an otherwise well-seated device and interfere with the endothelialization needed to seal it permanently.

The STUN-AF concept was to electrically stun the appendage — eliminating its contractile motion — before deploying the occluder, so the device sits still long enough to heal in place.

Complete Appendage Sealing, With vs Without Prior LAA Ablation 0% 50% 100% 71% 36% 4 months 96% 58% 12 months LAA ablation before LAAO LAAO alone
P < 0.001 for both comparisons; nonrandomized, three-center US cohort (n = 317).

Study Design and Findings

STUN-AF enrolled 317 patients (mean age 76 years, 58% men) with atrial fibrillation or flutter undergoing concomitant pulsed-field ablation (PFA) and LAAO at three US centers.

Pulmonary vein isolation was performed predominantly with the Farawave catheter (62% of cases) and the Sphere-9 catheter (34%), with LAAO performed using Watchman FLX or FLX Pro devices.

After standard pulmonary vein isolation, 70% of patients underwent additional ablation targeting the appendage itself before device implantation, while 30% proceeded directly to closure.

On multivariable analysis, prior appendage ablation was the only independent predictor of complete sealing at four months, cutting the odds of any leak by roughly 80%.

Mechanistically, appendage ablation measurably reduced LAA emptying velocities, and lower velocities independently tracked with lower odds of leak — supporting residual contractility as a modifiable target.

Adverse events were reassuringly low and similar between groups, with 98% of patients free of any periprocedural complication.

There was a numerically lower stroke rate at three months in the ablation group (0.5% vs 2.1%), though the study was explicitly underpowered to detect differences in hard clinical outcomes.

Table 1. STUN-AF at a Glance

Nonrandomized, three-center US study of concomitant PFA and LAAO
ParameterDetail
Population317 patients with AF/flutter undergoing same-session PFA + LAAO
Mean age / sex76 years; 58% men
InterventionAdditional LAA-directed ablation before device implantation (70% of cohort)
ComparatorLAAO without prior LAA ablation (30% of cohort)
No-leak rate, 4 months71% (ablation) vs 36% (no ablation), P < 0.001
No-leak rate, 12 months96% (ablation) vs 58% (no ablation), P < 0.001
Periprocedural adverse events98% free of events overall; no between-group difference
Key limitationNonrandomized; underpowered for stroke/clinical endpoints

Where This Fits in Practice

The presenting investigator noted that appendage ablation is now performed routinely at the enrolling center whenever a patient is already undergoing combined AF ablation and LAAO in the same session.

The economics are a different story for isolated LAAO procedures, where opening an additional ablation catheter purely to stun the appendage is not currently reimbursed and unlikely to be practical.

That reimbursement gap is not hypothetical: the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule proposed cutting the work relative value units for LAAO (CPT 33340) by roughly 27%, a change professional societies have publicly opposed as a stroke-prevention access issue.

On the hospital side, CMS has already created a dedicated concomitant MS-DRG (317) that bundles ablation and appendage closure performed together, which is the payment structure under which same-session LAA-ablation-before-LAAO would most naturally fit.

An outside discussant, an interventional cardiologist unaffiliated with the trial, agreed that a hypercontractile appendage is a familiar culprit when a device "does not sit right," and that stilling the appendage helps it anchor.

Both the presenter and discussant called for a randomized trial to confirm a clinical benefit, while acknowledging that low absolute stroke rates make such a trial logistically difficult.

Proposed Same-Session Workflow PVI / PFA for AF Farawave or Sphere-9 LAA-directed ablation Reduces emptying velocity LAAO device implant Watchman FLX / FLX Pro TEE/CT f/u 4 & 12 months
Sequence used in the ablation-first arm of STUN-AF; timing within the same operative session.

The Device and Company Landscape

For physician-investors tracking the structural heart and electrophysiology space, this data point sits at the intersection of two fast-growing device categories inside the same procedure.

Boston Scientific supplies both the dominant LAAO platform and one of the two leading PFA catheters used in the study, giving it exposure on both sides of a combined procedure.

Medtronic's Affera mapping and ablation system with the Sphere-9 catheter was the second-most-used PFA platform in the cohort, and offers a dual pulsed-field/radiofrequency option in a single catheter.

Table 2. Devices and Companies Referenced in STUN-AF

Approximate market data as of early July 2026; for general context only
DeviceCategoryManufacturer (Ticker)Share PriceAnalyst Consensus
Watchman FLX / FLX ProLAAO occluderBoston Scientific (NYSE: BSX)~$45Buy; 12-mo target ~$75
Farawave / FARAPULSEPulsed-field ablation catheterBoston Scientific (NYSE: BSX)~$45Buy; 12-mo target ~$75
Sphere-9 / AfferaDual-energy (PFA + RF) mapping and ablation catheterMedtronic (NYSE: MDT)~$79Buy; 12-mo target ~$98

Both companies' PFA franchises are still maturing commercially, and the LAAO growth trajectory itself has recently been a point of investor scrutiny, with several analysts trimming price targets after commentary on slowing Watchman utilization.

As always, published analyst consensus ratings and price targets are snapshots that shift with each earnings cycle, and past device adoption trends are not a guarantee of future procedural volumes or share performance.

Illustrative Case

A 76-year-old with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and a prior gastrointestinal bleed on anticoagulation is scheduled for same-day pulmonary vein isolation and left atrial appendage closure.

Pre-procedural imaging shows a windsock-shaped appendage with brisk emptying velocities, a morphology previously associated with higher rates of residual device leak.

Based on the STUN-AF experience, the operator elects to extend ablation to the ostium and proximal appendage after pulmonary vein isolation and before device deployment.

Follow-up transesophageal echocardiography at four months shows complete appendage sealing, and the patient is transitioned off anticoagulation per protocol.

Bottom Line

In a nonrandomized 317-patient series, ablating the left atrial appendage before device closure roughly doubled complete-sealing rates at four months and nearly closed the gap entirely by one year.

The physiologic rationale — that residual appendage contractility disrupts device healing — is biologically coherent and measurable via emptying velocities on imaging.

Clinical outcome data remain underpowered, reimbursement for isolated LAAO does not currently support routine adjunctive ablation, and a randomized trial is unlikely given low event rates, so this remains a reasonable adjunct in combined-procedure patients rather than a new standard of care.

References

  1. STUN-AF: Ablation Before LAAO May Reduce Peridevice Leaks. TCTMD, July 2026.
  2. Peridevice Leaks After LAA Occlusion Signal Poorer 5-Year Outcomes. TCTMD.
  3. New York Valves 2026 Late-Breaking Research Preview. Cardiovascular Research Foundation.
  4. WATCHMAN FLX Pro Left Atrial Appendage Closure Device. Boston Scientific.
  5. FARAWAVE Pulsed Field Ablation Catheter. Boston Scientific.
  6. Sphere-9 Catheter, Affera Mapping and Ablation System. Medtronic.
  7. CMS Finalizes New Concomitant MS-DRG for LAAO and Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation. Heart Rhythm Society.
  8. CMS Reduces LAAO Value in Proposed 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule. American College of Cardiology.
  9. Boston Scientific Corporation (BSX) Stock Overview. StockAnalysis.com.
  10. Medtronic plc (MDT) Stock Overview. StockAnalysis.com.

Physician education disclaimer: This article summarizes publicly reported conference data and published literature for physician education. It is not a substitute for review of full trial methodology, primary sources, or institutional protocols, and should not be used to guide individual patient care decisions in isolation.

Financial education disclaimer: Company, ticker, and market data are provided for general financial education only and do not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Share prices and analyst ratings are time-sensitive snapshots that change frequently; past performance does not predict future results. Readers should consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.

The Second Universal Definition of Heart Failure: What Changes for Practice
Clinical Cardiology · Heart Failure

The Second Universal Definition of Heart Failure: What Changes for Practice

A new joint consensus retires rigid ejection-fraction cutoffs, expands how clinicians classify the causes of heart failure, and reframes the syndrome as a dynamic rather than fixed diagnosis.

9-minute read · Physician education · Includes physician-investor context

A joint writing group representing the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology, the European Society of Cardiology, and the World Heart Federation has published the Second Universal Definition of Heart Failure.

The document updates and reaffirms the first universal definition published in 2021, which introduced pre-heart failure as stage B and standardized previously ambiguous terminology.

It is not a clinical practice guideline, but a shared vocabulary intended to align trials, registries, and day-to-day documentation across specialties.

For a cardiologist writing notes, coding encounters, or screening for enrollment eligibility, the changes are practical rather than theoretical.

Why the Ejection-Fraction Cutoffs Had to Go

The first universal definition relied on specific left ventricular ejection fraction thresholds to separate HF with reduced ejection fraction from HF with preserved ejection fraction.

The writing committee concluded that those cutoffs were arbitrary given the known variability of echocardiographic measurement of LVEF and unresolved debate over whether thresholds should differ by sex, age, or ethnicity.

The lower limit of normal LVEF is now cited as approximately 53% for women and 52% for men, with slightly higher thresholds among individuals of Asian descent, reinforcing that no single number applies uniformly.

The new document therefore collapses the classification into three clinically actionable groups: reduced, preserved, and improved ejection fraction, without anchoring to a specific numeric boundary.

Figure 1 · HF Trajectory Across Stages
Stage AAt risk
Stage BPre-HF
Stage CSymptomatic HF
Stage DAdvanced HF
Improvement
(LVEF rises, abnormalities persist)
Remission
(normalized LVEF, minimal symptoms)
Recovery
(sustained normalization — minority)

Reframing Cause: Eighteen Pathogenic Groups Instead of Two

Clinical practice has long sorted heart failure into just ischemic and nonischemic cardiomyopathy, a split the committee says omits the treatable causes of dilated and hypertrophic disease.

A patient whose underlying cause is cardiac amyloidosis, for instance, benefits from disease-targeted therapy well beyond standard heart failure management.

The new framework proposes a pathogenic classification independent of ejection fraction, spanning ischemic, hypertensive, valvular, arrhythmia-related, infiltrative, infective, inflammatory, toxic, heritable, pericardial, metabolic and nutritional, pregnancy-related, stress-induced, pulmonary or right-sided, congenital, high-output, other, and idiopathic causes.

The intent is to standardize how causes are recorded in registries and trials, since the same patient population can otherwise be labeled inconsistently across studies.

Table 1 · Stages in the Development and Progression of HF
StageDefinition
A — At riskHypertension, atherosclerotic disease, diabetes, obesity, cardiotoxin exposure, or family history of cardiomyopathy, without symptoms, structural change, or elevated biomarkers.
B — Pre-HFStructural or functional cardiac abnormality, or elevated natriuretic peptide or troponin, without current or prior symptoms.
C — HFCurrent or prior symptoms or signs caused by a structural or functional cardiac abnormality.
D — Advanced HFSevere symptoms at rest or minimal exertion, recurrent hospitalization despite guideline-directed therapy, or need for inotropes, mechanical support, transplantation, or palliative care.

HF with Improved Ejection Fraction Is Not a Cure

Patients whose previously reduced LVEF rises or normalizes on therapy are classified as HF with improved ejection fraction, a category first formalized in the 2022 heart failure guideline.

The document is explicit that improvement in EF does not equal disease resolution, and these patients remain at risk for recurrent left ventricular dysfunction, hospitalization, and sudden cardiac death.

Once a diagnosis of symptomatic heart failure is established, the individual is generally considered to carry that diagnosis permanently, even if the clinical picture improves substantially.

Practically, this means continued guideline-directed medical therapy and longitudinal surveillance rather than a taper toward discontinuation once an echocardiogram looks reassuring.

A related but distinct state, HF in remission, applies to select asymptomatic patients with normalized LVEF and stable biomarkers, while true recovery with sustained normalization of structure, function, and symptoms is reached by only a minority.

Worsening HF and Decompensated HF Are Now Distinguished

The consensus separates worsening HF, a progressive deterioration in symptoms or signs in a patient with an established diagnosis, from new-onset presentations or symptom flares driven by unrelated events such as infection or nonadherence.

Decompensated HF is defined more narrowly as the point at which treatment intensification is required, commonly an increase in diuretic dose, addition of combination diuretic therapy, or escalation to advanced interventions.

The distinction matters for documentation and for trial eligibility, since decompensation implies a treatment threshold rather than simply a worse-feeling patient.

Recognizing HF Mimics

The document devotes explicit attention to conditions that resemble heart failure without being pathophysiologically driven by myocardial neurohormonal activation.

Chronic kidney disease, third-trimester pregnancy, and obesity with deconditioning can all produce dyspnea, edema, and exertional limitation that mimic HF, sometimes accompanied by falsely reassuring natriuretic peptide levels.

Roughly half of the heart failure population across the ejection-fraction spectrum has coexisting coronary disease, and myocardial ischemia itself can serve as a mimic, a comorbid driver, or a trigger of decompensation.

Geography Still Shapes Cause

Ischemic heart disease accounts for more than half of HF cases across Western high-income and Eastern European regions but under 10% in sub-Saharan Africa, where hypertensive heart disease predominates instead.

Chagas disease remains a leading cause in parts of Latin America, while chronic obstructive pulmonary disease contributes disproportionately to HF prevalence in South and East Asia.

The committee also flags a near-absence of sub-Saharan African participants in major heart failure trials, a gap that limits how confidently global guidance can be generalized.

Figure 2 · Leading Contributors to HF Prevalence by Region (Illustrative, Global Burden of Disease-Derived)
50%+
Ischemic heart disease
Western / E. Europe
33%
Hypertensive disease
Sub-Saharan Africa
38%
COPD-related
South Asia
16%
Alcoholic CM
Eastern Europe
<10%
Ischemic disease
Sub-Saharan Africa

The GDMT and Company Landscape

None of the four pillars of guideline-directed medical therapy change under the new definition, but the reclassification affects which patients trial sponsors and payers consider eligible for these agents.

For physician-investors tracking the space, the table below summarizes representative agents, current approximate cash pricing, and the companies behind them.

Table 2 · Representative GDMT Agents and Market Context
Class / AgentBrandApprox. Cash Price (30-day)Company (Ticker)
ARNI — sacubitril/valsartanEntresto~$600–700 brand; generic ~$45–90 with discount card; Medicare Part D negotiated ~$295Novartis (NVS)
SGLT2 inhibitor — dapagliflozinFarxiga~$530–780 brand; GoodRx cash ~$288; generic availableAstraZeneca (AZN)
SGLT2 inhibitor — empagliflozinJardiance~$360–830 brand; no generic; copay card as low as $0Boehringer Ingelheim (private) / Eli Lilly (LLY)
Nonsteroidal MRA — finerenoneKerendia~$550–600 brand; manufacturer copay assistance availableBayer (BAYRY)
Steroidal MRA — spironolactonegeneric (Aldactone)<$15 genericMultiple generic manufacturers

Pricing is a snapshot subject to change, and it reflects list or cash pricing rather than what any individual patient pays after insurance, rebates, or Medicare Part D redesign under the Inflation Reduction Act.

This is general financial education, not personalized investment advice, and analyst views on any of these names can shift quickly around earnings and pipeline readouts.

What Actually Changes at the Bedside

Staging from stage A through stage D is unchanged, so risk-factor counseling and pre-HF surveillance workflows remain valid as written.

What changes is the language used when documenting ejection-fraction category and cause, favoring the simplified three-group EF framework and the expanded eighteen-category cause list over the old ischemic-versus-nonischemic shorthand.

Clinicians involved in trial screening or registry data entry should expect case-report forms to migrate toward this vocabulary over the next several guideline cycles.

Case Vignette

A 68-year-old with a history of anterior myocardial infarction and an LVEF that improved from 30% to 46% on quadruple guideline-directed therapy is told by a well-meaning relative that they are "cured."

Applying the second universal definition, this patient is correctly classified as HF with improved ejection fraction, not as a patient in remission or recovery, since residual scar and biomarker elevation persist.

The clinical implication is continuation of all four GDMT pillars, periodic re-imaging, and counseling that the diagnosis of heart failure remains permanent despite the reassuring echocardiogram.

Bottom Line

The second universal definition of heart failure moves away from rigid LVEF cutoffs toward three clinically actionable phenotypes, expands cause classification from two categories to eighteen, and reinforces that improvement in ejection fraction is not equivalent to cure.

Staging (A through D) and the core four-pillar GDMT approach are unchanged, but documentation language, trial eligibility criteria, and registry data fields are likely to evolve toward this new framework over time.

References

Disclaimer: This article is intended for physician education and general clinical discussion; it does not constitute individualized medical advice and should not replace clinical judgment or current society guidelines. Drug pricing and company information are provided for general financial education only, not as personalized investment advice; pricing is time-sensitive and subject to change, and past performance of any security does not predict future results. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Nickel-Free and Circular: What the Siegel TAVI Valve Means for Practice and Portfolio
Structural Heart · Device Innovation

Nickel-Free and Circular: What the Siegel TAVI Valve's Early Data Mean for Practice and Portfolio

A novel balloon-expandable, nickel-free transcatheter valve posted low pacemaker rates and stable two-year hemodynamics at New York Valves 2026 — and a $1.5 billion industry bet suggests Wall Street is paying attention too.

A new entrant in the crowded transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) field is drawing attention for solving two problems at once.

The Siegel valve, developed by MiRus, is built from a proprietary molybdenum-rhenium alloy rather than the nickel-titanium nitinol used in most commercial platforms.

That single material change addresses an estimated 20% of Americans with nickel sensitivity who have historically been poor candidates for self-expanding nitinol valves.

Early feasibility and first-in-human data presented at New York Valves 2026 showed acute procedural success in all cases, a low new-pacemaker rate, and hemodynamics that held steady out to two years.

For practicing interventional and general cardiologists, the device is not yet commercially available, but its design logic and its emerging industry backing are worth understanding now.

Case Vignette

A 78-year-old patient with severe, symptomatic aortic stenosis and a documented history of a contact dermatitis reaction to a nickel-containing orthopedic implant is referred for valve evaluation.

Computed tomography shows a heavily calcified, mildly bicuspid annulus with iliofemoral vessels too small for standard 14-Fr delivery systems.

The heart team is hesitant to proceed with a nitinol-frame self-expanding valve given the allergy history, and the patient is anxious about being "turned away" from a minimally invasive option.

This is the patient population in which investigational nickel-free, low-profile platforms such as the Siegel valve are being studied, and a structural heart referral for trial screening — rather than default surgical referral — may be appropriate where enrollment is open.

An Engineering Story Built Around Three Problems

Conventional self-expanding TAVI frames rely on nitinol for its shape-memory and superelastic properties, but nitinol contains nickel and titanium and can foreshorten during deployment.

The Siegel platform instead uses a molybdenum-rhenium "MoRe" superalloy with vertical stent rods designed to eliminate foreshortening entirely, which the developer says improves positioning precision and may lower conduction-system trauma.

The frame is coated with nitric oxide, a strategy intended to support endothelial healing and reduce the inflammatory response that can contribute to leaflet thrombosis.

Commissural alignment flags built into the frame let operators visualize and rotate the valve into the optimal commissural position before final deployment, rather than relying on post-hoc imaging correction.

The valve also arrives pre-mounted on its delivery balloon, removing a manual crimping step that exists with some other balloon-expandable systems.

Delivery occurs through an 8-Fr expandable sheath, roughly half the profile of many currently marketed systems, which may extend transfemoral eligibility to patients with smaller-caliber peripheral vessels, including more women.

Table 1. Siegel Valve Design Features vs. Two Commercial Comparators
FeatureSiegel (MiRus, investigational)Sapien 3 family (Edwards Lifesciences)Evolut family (Medtronic)
Frame alloyMolybdenum-rhenium (nickel-free)Cobalt-chromiumNitinol (nickel-titanium)
Deployment mechanismBalloon-expandableBalloon-expandableSelf-expanding
Delivery sheath8-Fr expandable14-Fr (eSheath)14-Fr (self-expanding system)
ForeshorteningDesigned to eliminateStandard for classGreater, by design (supra-annular)
Leaflet ellipticity ratio, tricuspid1.02 (reported)1.09 (reported)1.20 (reported)
Sizes available in study23, 26, 29 mm20–29 mm range23–34 mm range
Regulatory statusInvestigational (STAR trial enrolling)FDA-approved, commercialFDA-approved, commercial
Ellipticity values closer to 1.0 indicate a more circular valve orifice, which investigators have associated with more favorable durability profiles. Figures for Siegel and comparator devices as reported by the presenting investigator at New York Valves 2026; comparator specifications are manufacturer-published.

What the First-in-Human and Feasibility Data Showed

The pooled experience includes five patients treated in a first-in-human cohort in Chile and 30 patients enrolled in a nine-site United States early feasibility study, for a combined 35 patients.

Mean age in the feasibility cohort was 76 years, 57% were male, mean Society of Thoracic Surgeons score was 2.81%, and 80% were classified as low surgical risk.

All procedures used transfemoral access, positioning and commissural alignment were achieved in every case, and mean time from sheath insertion to valve deployment was 15 minutes.

One death unrelated to the valve occurred by six months (under 1%), and three patients required a new permanent pacemaker (8.5%).

No strokes, annular ruptures, need for a second valve, reinterventions, major vascular complications, significant bleeding, more-than-moderate aortic regurgitation, or acute kidney injury were reported through the available follow-up.

Three of the 35 patients had previously been declined for TAVI elsewhere specifically because of severe nickel allergy.

First-in-human cohort (to 2 years)
Baseline
40.1 mmHg
Follow-up
7.8 mmHg
EFS cohort, 26-mm valve (to 6 months)
Baseline
41.2 mmHg
Follow-up
7.0 mmHg
EFS cohort, 23-mm valve (to 6 months)
Baseline
39.0 mmHg
Follow-up
8.3 mmHg
Baseline mean gradientFollow-up mean gradient
Figure 1. Mean transvalvular gradients fell substantially across all cohorts and valve sizes and, notably, did not show the double-digit residual gradients sometimes seen with smaller valve sizes from other platforms in patients with small annuli.

Aortic valve area improved in parallel, increasing from 0.8 to 2.0 cm² in the first-in-human cohort, from 0.8 to 2.5 cm² for the 26-mm EFS valve, and from 0.7 to 2.2 cm² for the 23-mm EFS valve.

The presenting investigator described the stability of these gradients and areas out to two years as the most clinically important early signal, particularly because smaller valve sizes are typically where prosthesis-patient mismatch becomes most apparent with existing platforms.

The Circularity-Durability Hypothesis

A recurring theme at the session was whether a valve with high radial force and minimal recoil might be more prone to annular injury in heavily calcified anatomy.

The presenting investigator argued that rupture risk relates more to oversizing strategy than to absolute radial force, and that because the Siegel frame does not require hyperinflation to compensate for recoil, the balloon can target a narrower 0–2% oversizing range.

On that basis, the feasibility study enrolled patients with aortic valve calcium scores up to 7,000 Agatston units, including bicuspid anatomy, contingent on heart-team and review-committee sign-off.

Investigators also pointed to valve "circularity" — how closely the deployed orifice approximates a true circle — as an underappreciated durability variable, since an elliptical orifice can produce regions of leaflet stress concentration.

Siegel, tricuspid
1.02
Siegel, bicuspid
1.03
Sapien 3, tricuspid
1.09
Sapien 3, bicuspid
1.12
Evolut, tricuspid
1.20
Evolut, bicuspid
1.30
Figure 2. Ellipticity ratio by valve and annular morphology, as reported by the presenting investigator at New York Valves 2026. A ratio of 1.00 represents a perfect circle; longer bars indicate a more elliptical, less circular deployed frame.

Leaflet sourcing was also highlighted as a differentiator, with the developer reportedly applying selective screening of porcine pericardial tissue for thickness uniformity and collagen cross-linkage before use.

Whether these design choices translate into superior long-term durability remains unproven, and panel discussants were careful to note that the benchmark — the Sapien 3 platform's own long-term performance — is a high bar.

Where the Program Goes Next

The pivotal STAR trial is now enrolling roughly 1,000 to 1,025 patients with severe, symptomatic aortic stenosis across the risk spectrum, randomizing them to the Siegel valve or a commercially available balloon-expandable or self-expanding device.

The primary endpoint is a composite of mortality, stroke, and cardiovascular hospitalization at one year.

Current access is limited to enrolling STAR trial sites, and the device has no FDA approval or commercial pricing at this time.

Operators interested in offering the technology to nickel-allergic or small-vessel patients should look for STAR trial participation among regional structural heart programs rather than expecting near-term commercial access.

The Investing Angle: A $1.5 Billion Signal

In May 2026, Boston Scientific invested $1.5 billion in MiRus, acquiring a 34% equity stake along with an exclusive option to acquire the Siegel TAVR business outright for an additional $3 billion if the program hits clinical and regulatory milestones.

The move marks Boston Scientific's third attempt to break into the TAVI market after its earlier Acurate and Lotus Edge platforms were discontinued, and it gives the company a stake in a technology explicitly positioned as nickel-free and differentiated rather than a me-too valve.

For a physician-investor audience, the deal is a reminder that device-maker valuations can move on early-stage structural heart bets long before FDA approval or revenue materializes.

The broader TAVI market remains a duopoly in practice, with Edwards Lifesciences and Medtronic together accounting for the overwhelming majority of commercial implants, which is the incumbency Boston Scientific is trying to disrupt with this investment.

Table 2. Public Companies With a Direct Stake in This Story
CompanyTickerRecent share priceRelevance to Siegel/TAVI
Boston Scientific CorporationNYSE: BSX~$43–46$1.5B investment for 34% stake in MiRus; exclusive option to acquire Siegel TAVR business for $3B more
Edwards Lifesciences CorporationNYSE: EW~$90–91Maker of the Sapien 3 family; dominant incumbent balloon-expandable platform
Medtronic plcNYSE: MDT~$80–81Maker of the Evolut family; dominant incumbent self-expanding platform
Prices are approximate and reflect late-June 2026 trading levels; they will move and should be verified independently before any investment decision. This table is general financial education, not personalized investment advice.

On reimbursement, it is worth noting that none of the commercial valves' device-level acquisition costs are publicly itemized, since CMS bundles transcatheter valve procedures into inpatient diagnosis-related group payments rather than reimbursing the valve as a separate line item.

Total one-year episode costs for balloon-expandable TAVR have been estimated in the $80,000 range in published cost-utility analyses, a figure that includes the device, procedure, hospitalization, and follow-up rather than device acquisition cost alone.

Should the Siegel valve reach approval, its eventual pricing will likely be set competitively against this established episode-cost backdrop rather than as a stand-alone premium product.

Bottom Line
  • The Siegel valve is an investigational, nickel-free, balloon-expandable TAVI platform showing low pacemaker rates, stable two-year hemodynamics, and a markedly more circular deployed frame than two leading commercial comparators in early data.
  • It is not yet FDA-approved; access is currently limited to the enrolling STAR pivotal trial, and clinicians should not expect near-term commercial availability.
  • The device may be particularly relevant for patients with documented nickel allergy or small peripheral vessels once broader access is available.
  • Boston Scientific's $1.5 billion equity investment and acquisition option signal industry confidence but do not substitute for pivotal-trial efficacy and durability data, which will not mature for several years.
This article is intended for physician education and general information purposes only. It does not constitute clinical, legal, or financial advice, and it should not be used as the sole basis for any patient-care or investment decision. Device availability, regulatory status, and pricing described here reflect publicly available information as of late June 2026 and are subject to change. Readers should consult primary trial data, current prescribing/use information, and a qualified financial advisor before acting on any information presented.
Statin Deprescribing: A Practical Algorithm for Patients With Limited Life Expectancy

Statin Deprescribing: A Practical Algorithm for Patients With Limited Life Expectancy

A 2026 review of 56 studies builds the evidence case for stopping statins in frail, multimorbid, and end-of-life patients — here is what the data show and how to apply it.

The reflexive instinct in cardiology is to keep patients on a statin indefinitely once it has been started.

A newly published comprehensive review in Internal Medicine Journal challenges that default for a specific population: patients whose limited life expectancy or significant multimorbidity shifts the risk-benefit calculus away from long-term prevention.

Statins reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol to prevent atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, but in patients with shortened prognosis the long-term benefits shrink while the risks of harm grow proportionally larger.

The investigators behind this review systematically searched PubMed in November 2024 using the terms "statins AND (deprescribing OR deprescription)."

Fifty-six studies met inclusion criteria, spanning sample sizes from a single patient to more than 212,000.

This article synthesizes that evidence base alongside a companion 2026 meta-analysis in BMC Geriatrics and a landmark randomized trial, then translates the findings into a bedside-usable framework.

The Evidence Landscape: What 56 Studies Actually Show

Most of the published literature on statin deprescribing is observational rather than experimental, with real-world database studies accounting for nearly two-thirds of included reports.

Only about one in nine studies was a randomized controlled trial, underscoring how much of current practice rests on real-world rather than experimental evidence.

Distribution of Study Designs Among 56 Included Statin-Deprescribing Studies
Real-world studies
65%
Narrative reviews
17%
Randomized trials
11%
Systematic reviews
9%
Case report
2%
Source: systematic review of statin deprescribing literature, Internal Medicine Journal, 2026.

Database analyses of clinical, administrative, and quality-of-life outcomes were the dominant assessment tool, used in roughly six of every ten studies.

Notably, about four in ten studies reported favorable outcomes after deprescribing, with discontinuation generally unassociated with serious adverse events and frequently linked to better quality of life.

A multidisciplinary team — typically physicians, pharmacists, and nurses working together — carried out the deprescribing intervention in 43% of cases, reinforcing that this is rarely a single-clinician decision.

The Strongest Signal: A 2026 Meta-Analysis Across 33,000 Patients

A separate systematic review and meta-analysis published in BMC Geriatrics pooled 15 studies of preventive-medication deprescribing — including statins, antihypertensives, anticoagulants, and antidiabetic agents — in frail, demented, or terminally ill older adults.

From over 10,000 initial records, the analysis ultimately included 15 studies representing more than 33,000 participants with mean ages ranging from the mid-60s to roughly 95 years.

Pooled across all drug classes, deprescribing was not associated with a statistically significant increase in all-cause mortality, hospitalization, or major adverse cardiovascular events.

When the analysis was restricted to randomized trials alone, the mortality signal tightened further, with no meaningful difference between deprescribing and continuation groups.

Pooled Relative Risk (95% CI) — Deprescribing vs. Continuation
All-cause mortality
Hospitalization
MACE
RR 0.5RR 1.0 (no difference)RR 2.0+
Each point estimate's confidence interval crosses RR 1.0, indicating no statistically significant difference between deprescribing and continuation across all 15 pooled studies. Data: BMC Geriatrics, 2026.

The certainty of this evidence was rated very low by GRADE criteria, and the authors were explicit that further high-quality studies are still needed.

Deprescribing also showed no increased risk of fracture or fall, and antihypertensive deprescribing specifically produced only a modest, clinically negligible rise in systolic blood pressure.

The Defining Trial: Statin Discontinuation in Advanced Illness

The most influential single study in this field remains a multicenter, pragmatic randomized clinical trial of statin discontinuation in patients with an estimated life expectancy of one month to one year.

Investigators enrolled 381 patients who had been on statin therapy for at least three months and had no recent active cardiovascular disease, randomizing them to discontinue or continue treatment.

Death within 60 days, the primary outcome, occurred in 23.8% of the discontinuation group versus 20.3% of the continuation group — a difference that was not statistically significant.

Quality of life, measured by a standard palliative-care instrument, was significantly better in the group that stopped statins.

Fewer than 5% of patients in either arm experienced a cardiovascular event during follow-up, and discontinuation produced an estimated cost savings of roughly $3.37 per patient per day.

Table 1. Key Outcomes From the Pivotal Statin-Discontinuation RCT in Advanced, Life-Limiting Illness
OutcomeDiscontinuation armContinuation armStatistical significance
60-day mortality (primary endpoint)23.8%20.3%Not significant (P = 0.36)
Cardiovascular events<5%<5%No meaningful difference
Quality-of-life score (McGill QOL)7.116.85Significant favoring discontinuation (P = 0.04)
Estimated savings per patient~$716 over the study period

One important caveat belongs here, in the interest of balance: noninferiority for the primary endpoint was not formally met, because the trial's confidence interval extended slightly beyond the prespecified margin even though the point estimate favored no harm.

That nuance is why most experts describe the evidence as reassuring rather than definitive, and why shared decision-making — not blanket protocol — remains the standard.

A Practical Deprescribing Algorithm

The Canadian deprescribing.org consortium has formalized a stepwise statin deprescribing algorithm that mirrors the logic emerging from this literature.

The algorithm starts by asking whether the patient is taking a statin for primary or secondary prevention, since the calculus differs meaningfully between the two.

It then layers in life expectancy, frailty status, and the patient's own priorities — pill burden versus residual cardiovascular risk reduction — before recommending continuation, dose reduction, or discontinuation.

Patients with a Clinical Frailty Scale score of 4 or higher were largely excluded from the randomized evidence base, which means decisions in this group lean more heavily on shared values than on hard trial data.

Reasonable Candidates for a Deprescribing Conversation

Life expectancy under approximately one year from any cause is the clearest trigger identified across the reviewed literature.

Advanced dementia or severe functional dependence, where the time-to-benefit of statin therapy plausibly exceeds remaining lifespan, is a second common trigger.

Significant statin-attributable symptoms — myalgia, fatigue, or gastrointestinal intolerance — that are eroding quality of life add further weight toward a trial of discontinuation.

Active patient preference to reduce pill burden, once risks and benefits have been discussed, is itself a valid and sufficient reason to proceed.

Patients Who Should Generally Continue

Patients with recent acute coronary syndrome, recent revascularization, or other active cardiovascular disease were excluded from the deprescribing trials and should generally remain on therapy.

Patients with a reasonably preserved life expectancy and good functional status fall outside the population this evidence was designed to address.

Generic, Brand, and Cost Considerations

One underappreciated dimension of this conversation is that statins are now overwhelmingly generic, which somewhat narrows the cost-savings argument compared with deprescribing newer, branded agents.

Table 2. Commonly Prescribed Statins: Generic and Brand Identity, Originating Manufacturer, and Representative Cash Pricing
Generic nameBrand nameOriginating company (ticker)Approx. 30-day cash price
AtorvastatinLipitorPfizer (NYSE: PFE)$4–$11 generic; brand savings card as low as $4
RosuvastatinCrestorAstraZeneca (NYSE: AZN)$10–$20 generic
SimvastatinZocorMerck (NYSE: MRK)$4–$10 generic
PravastatinPravacholBristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY)$4–$12 generic

Generic atorvastatin alone is among the most prescribed drugs in the United States, with cash prices as low as $4 for a 30-day supply at major retail pharmacy discount programs.

For most patients, the rationale for deprescribing is therefore symptom burden, pill count, and goals-of-care alignment rather than direct drug cost — though caregiver and system-level savings from reduced monitoring, lab draws, and visit complexity remain real.

As of this writing, Pfizer (PFE) traded near $24 per share and AstraZeneca (AZN) traded near $189 per share; both figures are provided for general financial-education context only and change daily.

Case Vignette

An 84-year-old woman with metastatic pancreatic cancer and an estimated prognosis of four to six months is admitted for malaise and poor appetite.

Her medication list includes atorvastatin 40 mg, started a decade earlier for primary prevention, alongside ten other chronic medications.

She has no history of myocardial infarction, stroke, or revascularization, and her family reports that pill-taking has become physically exhausting for her.

Applying the framework above, her limited life expectancy, absence of active cardiovascular disease, and clearly stated preference to reduce pill burden together support a shared decision to discontinue the statin, ideally documented after a brief conversation about residual (small) cardiovascular risk.

What Remains Uncertain

The certainty of evidence behind these recommendations is consistently graded as low to very low, a limitation the review authors themselves emphasize.

Follow-up periods across the pooled studies ranged from sixteen weeks to six years, which may not be long enough to capture delayed vascular events after stopping a statin.

Almost none of the underlying studies were powered specifically for cardiovascular mortality as a primary endpoint, which is why guideline bodies have been slow to issue formal statin deprescribing recommendations.

Ongoing and future randomized trials, rather than additional retrospective database studies, are what the field most needs to move this from a reasonable practice to a guideline-backed standard.

Bottom Line

In patients with a life expectancy of roughly one year or less, advanced frailty, or dementia, the cumulative evidence — though still low-certainty — does not show increased mortality or cardiovascular events from stopping a statin, and quality of life may improve.

Decisions should remain individualized, ideally multidisciplinary, and anchored in the patient's own goals rather than applied as a blanket protocol.

Patients with recent or active cardiovascular disease fall outside this evidence base and should generally continue therapy.

This article is intended for physician education and general clinical discussion only; it does not constitute individualized medical advice and should not replace clinical judgment, institutional guidelines, or shared decision-making with individual patients. Drug pricing and stock data are approximate, change frequently, and are provided for general financial-education context rather than investment or prescribing guidance.