First WVU Medicine Children’s heart patient successfully receives Harmony Valve

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – A 16-year-old from Frostburg, Maryland, is the first patient at WVU Medicine Children’s to successfully undergo treatment for a heart defect called tetralogy of Fallot with the Harmony™ Transcatheter Pulmonary Valve, a catheter-deployable bioprosthetic valve.  

Front row left to right: Christopher Mercer, M.D.; Dan Gober, R.T.(R), pediatric interventional tech; Doug Haberlein; Alex Verhoeven, M.D.; bottom row: Lisa Haberlein; Zach Haberlein; Jenna Haberlein; Sophia Libonati, R.T.(R)(CI), pediatric interventional modality specialist
Front row left to right: Christopher Mercer, M.D.; Dan
Gober, R.T.(R), pediatric interventional tech; Doug
Haberlein; Alex Verhoeven, M.D.; bottom row: Lisa Haberlein;
Zach Haberlein; Jenna Haberlein; Sophia Libonati, R.T.(R)(CI),
pediatric interventional modality specialist

“The new valve is for patients who have an underlying condition that results in a lack of pulmonary valve competency and are not a candidate for the much smaller, more limited previous balloon-deployable valves,” Alex Verhoeven, M.D., pediatric cardiologist at WVU Medicine Children’s, said. 

About 75 percent of patients with tetralogy of Fallot did not have access to a less-invasive catheter-based option because the diverse ways a pulmonary valve can develop made a universal valve challenging.

“Previously, all of these patients would require a bypass surgical approach to replace their valve due to the lack of available minimally invasive options for them,” Dr. Verhoeven said. “With a catheter-based deployment, they can typically go home the next day, do not have a large incision on their chest, can get back to their normal activities much faster, feel better faster, and do not undergo the risk of cardiopulmonary bypass.”

WVU Medicine Children’s Heart Center patient Zach Haberlein was the hospital’s first recipient of the Harmony Valve.   

Haberlein was born with an almost completely obstructed pulmonary valve, which controls blood flow from the heart to the lungs so that it can refresh its oxygen supply before being pumped to the rest of the body. 
 
At two-days-old, Haberlein underwent emergency surgery to remove his pulmonary valve. He then lived without it for 15 years. 

Eventually, the WVU Medicine Children’s Pediatric Cardiology Team noticed some heart enlargement on Haberlein’s imaging tests, meaning it was time for him to receive his replacement valve. 

At the time, Verhoeven knew the Harmony Valve could be an option for Haberlein and worked with the valve’s creator, Medtronic, to create a valve for him. 

Haberlein has recovered from the procedure and is doing well. 

Since its release, approximately 1,000 Harmony Valves have been implanted in patients worldwide. WVU Medicine Children’s is one of 30 programs across the country equipped to perform the procedure. 

For information about the WVU Medicine Children’s Heart Center, visit WVUKids.com/Heart

Attention reporters and editors: Photos and video of Zach Haberlein are available for download and use here.

For media inquiries: Kathryn Vey, WVU Medicine Children’s Manager of Marketing & Communications - [email protected]