ObjectiveWe aimed to determine whether patent foramen ovale closure reduces the risk
of stroke, also assessing some safety outcomes.IntroductionThe clinical benefit of closing a patent foramen ovale after a cryptogenic
stroke has been an open question for several decades, so that it is
necessary to review the current state of published medical data in this
regard.MethodsMEDLINE, EMBASE, CENTRAL/CCTR, SciELO, LI-LACS, Google Scholar and reference
lists of relevant articles were searched for randomized controlled trials
that reported any of the following outcomes: stroke, death, major bleeding
or atrial fibrillation. Five studies fulfilled our eligibility criteria and
included 3440 patients (1829 for patent foramen ovale closure and 1611 for
medical therapy).ResultsThe risk ratio (RR) for stroke in the "device closure" group compared with
the "medical therapy" showed a statistically significant difference between
the groups, favouring the "device closure" group (RR 0.400; 95% CI
0.183-0.873, P=0.021). There was no statistically
significant difference between the groups regarding the safety outcomes
death and major bleeding, but we observed an increase in the risk of atrial
fibrillation in the "device closure group (RR 4.000; 95% CI 2.262-7.092,
P<0.001). We also observed that the larger the
proportion of effective closure, the lower the risk of stroke.ConclusionThis meta-analysis found that stroke rates are lower with percutaneously
implanted device closure than with medical therapy alone, being these rates
modulated by the rates of effective closure.
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