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Platelet Endothelial Aggregation Receptor-1 (PEAR1) Gene to be most strongly associated with Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Response: Genetic Determinants of Variable Response to Aspirin (alone and in combination with Clopidogrel)

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

4 Genetic Variation in PEAR1 is Associated with Platelet Aggregation and Cardiovascular Outcomes

Joshua P. Lewis1Kathleen Ryan1Jeffrey R. O’Connell1Richard B. Horenstein1,Coleen M. Damcott1Quince Gibson1Toni I. Pollin1Braxton D. Mitchell1Amber L. Beitelshees1Ruth Pakzy1Keith Tanner1Afshin Parsa1Udaya S. Tantry2Kevin P. Bliden2Wendy S. Post3Nauder Faraday3William Herzog4Yan Gong5Carl J. Pepine6Julie A. Johnson5Paul A. Gurbel2 and Alan R. Shuldiner7*

Author Affiliations

1University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD

2Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Baltimore, MD

3Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD

4Sinai Hospital of Baltimore & Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD

5University of Florida College of Pharmacy, Gainesville, FL

6University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL

7University of Maryland School of Medicine & Veterans Administration Medical Center, Baltimore, MD

* University of Maryland School of Medicine & Veterans Administration Medical Center, Baltimore, MD ashuldin@medicine.umaryland.edu

Abstract

Background-Aspirin or dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) with aspirin and clopidogrel is standard therapy for patients at increased risk for cardiovascular events. However, the genetic determinants of variable response to aspirin (alone and in combination with clopidogrel) are not known.

Methods and Results-We measured ex-vivo platelet aggregation before and after DAPT in individuals (n=565) from the Pharmacogenomics of Antiplatelet Intervention (PAPI) Study and conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of drug response. Significant findings were extended by examining genotype and cardiovascular outcomes in two independent aspirin-treated cohorts: 227 percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) patients, and 1,000 patients of the International VErapamil SR/trandolapril Study (INVEST) GENEtic Substudy (INVEST-GENES). GWAS revealed a strong association between single nucleotide polymorphisms on chromosome 1q23 and post-DAPT platelet aggregation. Further genotyping revealed rs12041331 in the platelet endothelial aggregation receptor-1 (PEAR1) gene to be most strongly associated with DAPT response (P=7.66×10-9). In Caucasian and African American patients undergoing PCI, A-allele carriers of rs12041331 were more likely to experience a cardiovascular event or death compared to GG homozygotes (hazard ratio = 2.62, 95%CI 0.96-7.10, P=0.059 and hazard ratio = 3.97, 95%CI 1.10-14.31, P=0.035 respectively). In aspirin-treated INVEST-GENES patients, rs12041331 A-allele carriers had significantly increased risk of myocardial infarction compared to GG homozygotes (OR=2.03, 95%CI 1.01-4.09, P=0.048).

Conclusions – Common genetic variation in PEAR1 may be a determinant of platelet response and cardiovascular events in patients on aspirin, alone and in combination with clopidogrel.

Clinical Trial Registration Information-clinicaltrials.gov; Identifiers:NCT00799396 and NCT00370045

SOURCE:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23392654

http://circgenetics.ahajournals.org/content/6/2/184.short?rss=1

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2013; 6: 184-192 Published online before print February 7, 2013,doi: 10.1161/​CIRCGENETICS.111.964627

 

 

 

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Ischemic Stable CAD: Medical Therapy and PCI no difference in End Point: Meta-Analysis of Contemporary Randomized Clinical Trials

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

SOURCE

Stergiopoulos K, Boden WE, Hartigan P, et al. Percutaneous coronary intervention outcomes in patients with stable obstructive coronary artery disease and myocardial ischemia: A collaborative meta-analysis of contemporary randomized clinical trialsJAMA Intern Med 2013; DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.12855. Available at:http://www.jamainternalmedicine.com.

 

PCI No Benefit Over Medical Therapy in Ischemic Stable CAD

December 02, 2013

NEW YORK, NY — A new analysis is calling into question the de facto rationale for many of the revascularization procedures taking place today, at least in patients with stable coronary artery disease[1]. In a meta-analysis of more than 5000 patients, PCI was no better than medical therapy in patients with documented ischemia by stress testing or fractional flow reserve (FFR).

“Cardiology has a long history of finding a marker of a bad outcome and treating that marker of that bad outcome as if it were the cause of the bad outcome,” senior author on the study, Dr David Brown (State University of New York [SUNY]–Stony Brook School of Medicine), told heartwire . In the case of proceeding to PCI on the basis of documented ischemia, that stems from evidence that patients with ischemia have a worse prognosis than patients who don’t.”It has gotten to the point that a positive stress test [is the gateway] to doing an intervention, even if the ischemia is not in the same ischemic territory as the vessel being treated,” he said. “The medical/industrial complex in cardiology is now focused on finding and treating ischemia, and I think that’s not justified, and these data suggest that that’s not justified.”

Brown and colleagues, with first author Dr Kathleen Stergiopoulus (SUNY–Stony Brook School of Medicine), reviewed the literature for randomized clinical trials of PCI and medical therapy for stable CAD conducted over the past 40 years, ultimately including five trials of 5286 patients. These were a small German trial published in 2004, plus MASS II COURAGE , BARI 2D , and FAME 2 . In all, 4064 patients had myocardial ischemia documented by exercise, nuclear or echo stress imaging, or FFR.

Over a median follow-up of five years, mortality, nonfatal MI, unplanned revascularization, and angina were no different between patients treated medically vs those treated with PCI.

Odds Ratio, PCI vs Medical Therapy

Outcome Odds ratio 95% CI
Death 0.90 0.71–1.16
Nonfatal MI 1.24 0.99–1.56
Unplanned revascularization 0.64 0.35–1.17
Angina 0.91 0.57–1.44

“These findings are unique in that this is the first meta-analysis to our knowledge limited to patients with documented, objective findings of myocardial ischemia, almost all of whom underwent treatment with intracoronary stents and disease-modifying secondary-prevention therapy,” Stergiopoulus et al write.

The findings, they continue, “strongly suggest that the relationship between ischemia and mortality is not altered or ameliorated by catheter-based revascularization of obstructive, flow-limiting coronary stenosis.”

To heartwire , Brown pointed out that their analysis could not separate out patients who had small amounts of ischemia from those with larger ischemic territories. “Maybe that’s where the differentiating factor will be,” he acknowledged, adding that the 8000-patient ISCHEMIA trial, still ongoing, will hopefully yield some insights.

Current practice, however, is to check for ischemia and to proceed with catheterization and, usually, revascularization when ischemia is confirmed by stress testing or during FFR. “But if that doesn’t improve outcomes, why are we doing it?” Brown asked. “We think that needs to be rethought.”

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Commenting on the study for heartwire Dr Peter Berger(Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA) pointed out: “There is no question that PCI is more effective than medical therapy for relief of symptoms: the more severe the angina and the more active the patient, the greater the superiority of PCI.” And, as Berger noted, most of the studies included in this analysis documented ischemia but did not report on the frequency or severity of angina at baseline.

That said, “Patients with minimal angina—and certainly those with silent ischemia but no angina—are unlikely to have a significantly greater reduction of symptoms with PCI, and PCI is rarely beneficial in such patients.”

Moreover, Berger continued, it has been clearly established that PCI does not reduce the risk of death or MI in most such patients.

“I very much agree with the authors, however, that just because more severe ischemia has been shown to be associated with a worse long-term prognosis, reducing the ischemic burden ought not be assumed to reduce the likelihood of death or MI. In most such patients, it does not.”

Stergiopoulos and Brown had no disclosures. Disclosures for the coauthors are listed in the paper.

SOURCE 

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Resistance Hypertension: Renal Artery Intervention using Stenting

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

UPDATED 2/4/2014

Stenting and Medical Therapy for Atherosclerotic Renal-Artery Stenosis

Christopher J. Cooper, M.D., Timothy P. Murphy, M.D., Donald E. Cutlip, M.D., Kenneth Jamerson, M.D., William Henrich, M.D., Diane M. Reid, M.D., David J. Cohen, M.D., Alan H. Matsumoto, M.D., Michael Steffes, M.D., Michael R. Jaff, D.O., Martin R. Prince, M.D., Ph.D., Eldrin F. Lewis, M.D., Katherine R. Tuttle, M.D., Joseph I. Shapiro, M.D., M.P.H., John H. Rundback, M.D., Joseph M. Massaro, Ph.D., Ralph B. D’Agostino, Sr., Ph.D., and Lance D. Dworkin, M.D. for the CORAL Investigators

N Engl J Med 2014; 370:13-22 January 2, 2014DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1310753

BACKGROUND

Atherosclerotic renal-artery stenosis is a common problem in the elderly. Despite two randomized trials that did not show a benefit of renal-artery stenting with respect to kidney function, the usefulness of stenting for the prevention of major adverse renal and cardiovascular events is uncertain.

METHODS

We randomly assigned 947 participants who had atherosclerotic renal-artery stenosis and either systolic hypertension while taking two or more antihypertensive drugs or chronic kidney disease to medical therapy plus renal-artery stenting or medical therapy alone. Participants were followed for the occurrence of adverse cardiovascular and renal events (a composite end point of death from cardiovascular or renal causes, myocardial infarction, stroke, hospitalization for congestive heart failure, progressive renal insufficiency, or the need for renal-replacement therapy).

RESULTS

Over a median follow-up period of 43 months (interquartile range, 31 to 55), the rate of the primary composite end point did not differ significantly between participants who underwent stenting in addition to receiving medical therapy and those who received medical therapy alone (35.1% and 35.8%, respectively; hazard ratio with stenting, 0.94; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.76 to 1.17; P=0.58). There were also no significant differences between the treatment groups in the rates of the individual components of the primary end point or in all-cause mortality. During follow-up, there was a consistent modest difference in systolic blood pressure favoring the stent group (−2.3 mm Hg; 95% CI, −4.4 to −0.2; P=0.03).

CONCLUSIONS

Renal-artery stenting did not confer a significant benefit with respect to the prevention of clinical events when added to comprehensive, multifactorial medical therapy in people with atherosclerotic renal-artery stenosis and hypertension or chronic kidney disease. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00081731.)

SOURCE

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1310753

based on

What Do CORAL and ERASE Mean for Peripheral Intervention?

Seth Bilazarian, MD, Mark A. Creager, MD

November 27, 2013

Seth Bilazarian, MD: Hi. I’m Seth Bilazarian from the heart.org on Medscape. I’m here at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Dallas with Dr. Mark Creager, Director of Vascular Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Dr. Creager was the moderator of a session enriched with peripheral vascular disease topics yesterday. And I’m fortunate to be with him to unpack 2 of those studies: the ERASE study,[1] a study of peripheral artery disease in the lower extremities and exercise; and the CORAL study,[2] a study of renal artery intervention using stenting.

As a practicing endovascular medicine physician, I’m excited to get Dr. Creager’s take on this. The CORAL study, to start with, was a study that was sponsored by the NHLBI (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute), -looking at patients who had greater than 60% stenosis who had resistant hypertension or renal insufficiency and were optimally treated with medical therapy. The patients were given free antihypertensive therapies and statin therapy. And that alone was compared with medical therapy plus renal artery intervention with stenting.

Dr. Creager, can you summarize the take-home message and the results for our audience?

Mark A. Creager, MD: Thank you, Seth. This was an important study. The CORAL study compared these 2 groups, and the primary endpoints were cardiovascular and renal death, hospitalization for congestive heart failure, stroke, myocardial infarction, progressive renal insufficiency, and renal replacement therapy. The trial found that there was no significant difference in this primary composite endpoint between the 2 groups.

That’s an important message: that if we treat our patients with hypertension and renal insufficiency who have concomitant renal artery stenosis with appropriate medical therapy, they will do as well — in terms of cardiovascular and renal endpoints — as those who undergo renal artery stenting.

Dr. Bilazarian: A very strong message that stenting adds nothing, if we take home the short answer that renal stenting adds nothing on top of optimal medical therapy. Previously, enthusiasts for renal stenting criticized studies such as ASTRAL[3] and STAR[4] that the patients may not have been optimally chosen and may not have had significant enough renal artery stenosis.

In the CORAL study, we saw yesterday that in a subgroup analysis looking at patients who had greater or less than 80% stenosis, the average was 72% in the whole trial. But those at greater than 80% did not seem to fare any better from this study. They were the same as those at less than 80%. So does this largely close the door to renal stenting for atherosclerotic disease?

Dr. Creager: As implied by your question, one might have anticipated that those individuals with the most severe renal artery stenosis would have been those most likely to benefit. But as you stated, there was no difference between the patients who had a greater than 80% stenosis and those who did not. That really continues to raise questions about the efficacy of renal artery stenting in this population in general.

But it doesn’t entirely close the door. I think it still is very important for all physicians to deal with their patients individually and inform their decisions by the evidence that’s available. But there will be patients who have hypertension and remain refractory despite aggressive and appropriate medical therapy. And in those individuals, one might consider looking for the presence of renal artery stenosis, and if found, treat them.

But keep in mind that in this trial, the group randomized to medical therapy did demonstrate benefit. In fact, they demonstrated a 15-mm Hg (on average) decrease in systolic blood pressure, indicating that before enrollment in the trial they probably were being treated as aggressively as they should be.

My take-home message is: If you have a patient with significant hypertension, make sure you’re implementing guideline-based therapies to bring their blood pressure into appropriate control. And if one is not successful in that case, then consider other options.

Dr. Bilazarian: One of the findings in the study was that at the end of the trial, there was a 2.5-mm Hg blood pressure difference between those with renal stenting and those without renal stenting (both on optimal medical therapy). Did that result surprise you?

Dr. Creager: It did surprise me for the very reason I just alluded to. I think that prior to enrollment in the trial, many of these patients who were treated with 2 or more antihypertensive drugs still might not have been treated aggressively enough with the right doses of these drugs or the right number of drugs to bring their blood pressure down.

In fact, I was pleased to see that an intensive medical regimen could be effective in these patients. And it sends another important message to our medical community that we can do more for these patients.

Dr. Bilazarian: You mentioned in this last answer that there may still be a role for identifying patients with renal artery stenosis. Can you help clarify that for me as a director of the vascular lab at Brigham and Women’s Hospital? As a teacher of postgraduate physicians, help me understand in what situation patients should be evaluated.

Currently, patients who may not have frank resistant hypertension get referrals to duplex ultrasound for assessment. Should that bar be moved up? Or is it only the most refractory patients who should be investigated? Or is it still valuable to know whether a patient has renal artery stenosis with noninvasive testing?

Dr. Creager: The bar does need to be moved without question. But there are several situations. I’ll give you 2 examples. One I mentioned: The patient who continues to have resistant hypertension despite aggressive medical therapy will be one such patient where I’ll be looking for secondary causes. And one of those secondary causes could be renal artery stenosis. So in that individual, duplex ultrasound would be appropriate, and if renal artery stenosis is found, continue the evaluation and treat that patient as the renal artery stenosis is confirmed.

Another example might be an individual who has recurrent acute pulmonary edema that cannot be explained by coronary artery disease or severe left ventricular dysfunction. That’s a patient I would consider working up for bilateral renal artery stenosis. And if found, I would treat. That patient population was really not the type that was included in the CORAL trial. So those are 2 examples.

Dr. Bilazarian: Our current guidelines say that there is a role for renal artery intervention for resistant hypertension, acute pulmonary edema, and declining renal function. It seems like the first of those has been taken off the table. Is there a role in the patient with declining renal function?

Dr. Creager: Well, that’s an important subset of patients, indeed. And I would be evaluating them for the potential causes of declining renal function. If they have renal artery stenosis, I would then initiate aggressive risk factor modification, antiplatelet therapy, and if they’re hypertensive, treat that as well.

But if in spite of that there still is evidence of declining renal function, then there’s a situation of someone who has failed medical therapy, and I would consider evaluating them for a renal artery stenosis. If one were to find, for example, bilateral renal artery stenosis in that patient or a severe stenosis to a single functioning kidney, then, yes, I would consider renal artery stenting in that individual.

Dr. Bilazarian: Great. Thank you for that summary on the trial called CORAL. Let’s move on to the second trial that you moderated. That trial is called ERASE, a study looking at supervised exercise therapy — an abbreviation I wasn’t familiar with: SET — supervised exercise therapy alone or supervised exercise therapy plus intervention of lower-extremity peripheral arterial disease. And that study was called ERASE. It built on an earlier study called CLEVER.[5] Please summarize the take-home message for the audience in that trial.

Dr. Creager: These were patients with peripheral artery disease and intermittent claudication, and the peripheral artery disease could have affected the aortoiliac system or the femoropopliteal system. The bottom line is that those patients who were randomized to both endovascular intervention and supervised exercise training had a much greater improvement in their walking time as assessed by treadmill testing, and also in quality of life as assessed by a number of instruments, compared with those patients who were just treated with supervised exercise training.

It adds incrementally to what we’ve previously understood. We know that supervised exercise training is extremely effective in improving walking time in patients with intermittent claudication. And as was shown with CLEVER, compared with medical therapy, endovascular intervention — at least in the aortoiliac area — is also associated with improvement in walking time.

So perhaps it’s no surprise that if you put the two together, they’re going to do better. And that’s what the ERASE trial showed.

Dr. Bilazarian: I agree with you. Many times, studies compare one or the other. And, of course, both is better than one or the other. I was happy to see that this trial looked at both.

There is one part of the trial that I had difficulty getting a take-home message from, and I’d love your input. As endovascular medicine physicians, we think in terms of the 3 zones of lower-extremity vascular disease: above the inguinal ligament, the fem-pop system, and then below the knee. Each becomes increasingly difficult, both for acute result as well as for durability. In this trial, half the patients had aortoiliac disease and half had fem-pop disease. Am I right to say that that might make it somewhat difficult to interpret whether the effects of supervised exercise therapy might be different for fem-pop disease or, say, aortoiliac disease, and that the bar for intervention might be lower for aortoiliac disease?

Dr. Creager: That’s a very important question. We don’t know yet what the subset analysis will be between those patients who had aortoiliac disease and underwent randomization and those who had femoropopliteal artery disease. And I’m sure we all await that analysis when it’s available.

Having said that, however, the studies show several things. It underscores the fact that no matter where the lesion is, patients still do better when exercise training is included in their therapeutic interventions. I think those of us who practice vascular medicine recognize the fact that endovascular intervention in the iliac arteries has been extremely successful and durable. And those patients really do benefit. d Our practice pattern and standard of care is to do endovascular intervention in patients with disabling claudication who have aortoiliac disease.

Superficial femoral artery disease, as you implied, is a little bit of a different situation. Those lesions are sometimes more difficult to treat and the durability is not as great. Within the context of this study, durability was pretty good in terms of restenosis. But I still think we need to see the subset analysis to make sure that those patients benefited as much as the entire group.

Dr. Bilazarian: Help us with a take-home message for US-based physicians. This was supervised exercise therapy in-home. We don’t have that available in the United States. Other than adding to our knowledge base, which is, of course, valuable, and being able to impart this knowledge to our patients and show them that this is of value, what other things can we do as a change in our practice to integrate this?

Dr. Creager: Currently we do need changes in healthcare policy, at least as it applies to supervised exercise training. We need reimbursement from CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services). We need reimbursement from other third-party payers to provide additional incentive for physicians to recommend supervised exercise training for their patients. Unfortunately, that’s not available. And that’s one reason why patients in this country are not being referred for supervised exercise training. It’s an extremely effective intervention in patients with intermittent claudication.

Dr. Bilazarian: Great. Mark, thanks for joining me and for helping unpack these 2 trials for our audience: the ERASE trial of lower-extremity exercise in PAD patients, and the CORAL trial of renal artery stenting. I think they will add to our knowledge base and hopefully make practice changes in both areas. Thank you again for joining. And thank you for joining us for this program.

SOURCE

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/815029?src=emailthis#1

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TCT: Bifurcation Stent Misses Primary Endpoint

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

See on Scoop.itCardiovascular and vascular imaging

SAN FRANCISCO — Although the Tryton stent, specially designed for bifurcation coronary lesions, failed to demonstrate noninferiority, there were some hints of benefit, researchers reported here.

See on www.medpagetoday.com

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Myocardial Infarction: The New Definition After Revascularization

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

UPDATED on 7/31/2014

Myocardial Ischemia Symptoms

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/29/myocardial-ischemia-symptoms/

 

VIEW VIDEO

Gregg Stone, MD

Co-DIrector, Medical Research & Education Division Cardiovascular Research Foundation

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/MyocardialInfarction/42256?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2013-10-15&goback=%2Egmr_4346921%2Egde_4346921_member_5795830612724035588#%21

Primary source: Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Source reference: Moussa I, et al “Consideration of a new definition of clinically relevant myocardial infarction after coronary revascularization: an expert consensus document from the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI)” J Am Coll Cardiol2013; 62: 1563-1570.

Additional source: Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Source reference:White H “Avatar of the universal definition of periprocedural myocardial infarction” J Am Coll Cardiol 2013; 62: 1571-1574.

Moussa reported that he had no conflicts of interest.

Stone is a consultant for Boston Scientific, Eli Lilly, Daiichi Sankyo, and AstraZeneca. The other authors reported relationships with Guerbet, The Medicines Company, Bristol-Myers Squibb/Sanofi, Merck, Maya Medical, AstraZeneca, Abbott Vascular, Regado Biosciences, Janssen Pharma, Lilly/Daiichi Sankyo, St. Jude Medical, Medtronic, Terumo, Bridgepoint/Boston Scientific, Gilead, Boston Scientific, Eli Lilly, and Daiichi Sankyo.

White is co-chairman for the Task Force for the Universal Definiton of Myocardial Infarction; has received research grants from sanofi-aventis, Eli Lilly, The Medicines Company, the NIH, Pfizer, Roche, Johnson & Johnson, Schering-Plough, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Daiichi Sankyo Pharma Development, and Bristol-Myers Squibb; and has served on advisory boards for AstraZeneca, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Roche, and Regado Biosciences.

WASHINGTON, DC — A “clinically meaningful” definition of MI following PCI or CABG is urgently needed to replace the arbitrarily chosen “universal definition” proposed in recent years that has no relevance to patients and may be muddying clinical-trial results. Those are the conclusions of a new expert consensus document released Monday by the Society of Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI)[1].

The notion of a “universal definition of MI” was first proposed in 2000 and updated in 2007 and 2012. The 2012 document defines a PCI-related MI as an increase in cardiac troponin (cTn) of more than five times the upper limit of normal (ULN) during the first 48 hours postprocedure plus specific clinical or ECG features. Post-CABG, the definition is a cTn increase of >10 times the ULN, plus different clinical or ECG features.

The problem, lead author Dr Issam Moussa (Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL) told heartwire , is that these cutoffs were arbitrarily chosen and not based on any hard evidence that these biomarker levels spelled a poor prognosis. Moreover, “overnight, the rate of MI went from 5% following these procedures to 20% to 30%!” he said.

The SCAI committee, in its new document, focuses on post-PCI procedures and highlights the importance of acquiring baseline cardiac biomarkers and differentiating between patients with elevated baseline CK-MB (or cTn) in whom biomarker levels are stable or falling, as well as those in whom it hasn’t been established whether biomarkers are changing.

SCAI’s Proposed Clinically Meaningful MI Definitions

Group Definition
Normal baseline CK-MB CK-MB rise of >10x ULN or >5x ULN with new pathologic Q-waves in at least 2 contiguous leads or new persistent left bundle branch block
OR
In the absence of baseline CK-MB, a cTn rise of >70x ULN or a rise of>35 ULN plus new pathologic Q-waves in at least 2 contiguous leads or new persistent left bundle branch block
Elevated baseline biomarkers that are stable or falling A CK-MB or cTn rise that is equal (by an absolute increment) to the definitions described for patients with normal CK-MB at baseline.
Elevated baseline biomarkers that have not been shown to be stable or falling A CK-MB or cTn rise that is equal (by an absolute increment) to the definitions described for patients with normal CK-MB at baseline
Plus
New ST-segment elevation or depression
Plus
New-onset or worsening heart failure or sustained hypotension or other signs of a clinically relevant MI.

Moussa is quick to emphasize that these new clinically meaningful definitions have limited evidence to support them—and most of what exists supports CK-MB definitions, not cTn—but that the new document is based on the best scientific evidence available.

“We don’t want to come out with a definitive statement” saying this is the final word on MI definitions,” he stressed. “There is more science that needs to be done and there remains more uncertainty. We framed this to be inclusive and also to open the field for discussion.”

His hope is that this will lead to important changes in how patients are managed and money is spent. Currently, patients with clinically meaningless biomarker elevations may become unnecessarily panicked over news that they’ve had a “heart attack,” while hospital stays may be extended and further tests ordered on the basis of these results.

Moussa et al’s proposal also has important implications for clinical trials, he continued. Currently, for studies that include periprocedural MIs as an individual end point or as part of a composite end point, the very high number of biomarker-defined “MIs” collected in the trial could potentially overwhelm the true impact of any given therapy. “You are really using an end point that is truly not relevant to patients. . . . This could really affect the whole hypothesis.”

He’s expecting some push-back from cardiologists and academics, particularly those who championed the need for the universal definition in the first place, but believes most people will welcome a clinically meaningful definition.

“I think many in the medical community will accept this because they have not really been using the universal definition in their day-to-day practice anyhow.” What’s more, the National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR) does not include the reporting of MI postangiography, in part because of concerns that the universal definition of MI overestimates the true incidence of this problem. “I think many in the community will look at this definition as more reflective of the true incidence of MI after angioplasty, and if it’s accepted, they are more likely to report it to databases like NCDR and use it to reflect quality-of-care processes.”

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/812533?nlid=35983_2105&src=wnl_edit_medp_card&uac=93761AJ&spon=2

  • ESC/ACCF/AHA/WHF Expert Consensus Document

Circulation.2012; 126: 2020-2035  Published online before print August 24, 2012,doi: 10.1161/​CIR.0b013e31826e1058

Third Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction

  1. Kristian Thygesen;
  2. Joseph S. Alpert;
  3. Allan S. Jaffe;
  4. Maarten L. Simoons;
  5. Bernard R. Chaitman;
  6. Harvey D. White
  7. the Writing Group on behalf of the Joint ESC/ACCF/AHA/WHF Task Force for the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction
  1. *Corresponding authors/co-chairpersons: Professor Kristian Thygesen, Department of Cardiology, Aarhus University Hospital, Tage-Hansens Gade 2, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark. Tel: +45 7846-7614; fax: +45 7846-7619: E-mail: kristhyg@rm.dk. Professor Joseph S. Alpert, Department of Medicine, Univ. of Arizona College of Medicine, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., P.O. Box 245037, Tucson AZ 85724, USA, Tel: +1 520 626 2763, Fax: +1 520 626 0967, E-mail: jalpert@email.arizona.edu. Professor Harvey D. White, Green Lane Cardiovascular Service, Auckland City Hospital, Private Bag 92024, 1030 Auckland, New Zealand. Tel: +64 9 630 9992, Fax: +64 9 630 9915, E-mail: harveyw@adhb.govt.nz.

Table of Contents

  • Abbreviations and Acronyms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2021

  • Definition of Myocardial Infarction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2022

  • Criteria for Acute Myocardial Infarction. . . . . . . . . . . .2022

  • Criteria for Prior Myocardial Infarction. . . . . . . . . . . .2022

  • Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2022

  • Pathological Characteristics of Myocardial Ischaemia and Infarction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2023

  • Biomarker Detection of Myocardial Injury With Necrosis. . .2023

  • Clinical Features of Myocardial Ischaemia and Infarction. . .2024

  • Clinical Classification of Myocardial Infarction. . . .2024
    • Spontaneous Myocardial Infarction (MI Type 1). . . .2024

    • Myocardial Infarction Secondary to an Ischaemic Imbalance (MI Type 2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2024

    • Cardiac Death Due to Myocardial Infarction (MI Type 3). .2025

    • Myocardial Infarction Associated With Revascularization Procedures (MI Types 4 and 5). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . …

New Definition for MI After Revascularization

Published: Oct 14, 2013 | Updated: Oct 15, 2013

By Todd Neale, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today
Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Dorothy Caputo, MA, BSN, RN, Nurse Planner

The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI) has released a new definition for myocardial infarction (MI) following coronary revascularization aimed at identifying only those events likely to be related to poorer patient outcomes.

In the new criteria — published as an expert consensus document inCatheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions and the Journal of the American College of Cardiology — creatine kinase-myocardial band (CK-MB) is the preferred cardiac biomarker over troponin, and much greater elevations are required to define a clinically relevant MI compared with the universal definition of MI proposed in 2007 and revised in 2012.

Also, the new definition uses the same biomarker elevation thresholds to identify MIs following both percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), whereas the universal definition has different thresholds for events following the two procedures.

“What we’ve really tried to emphasize in this classification scheme is the primary link between biomarker elevations and prognosis,” according to Gregg Stone, MD, of Columbia University Medical Center and the Cardiovascular Research Foundation in New York City, one of the authors of the document.

“In the universal definition of MI, they even acknowledged that their criteria were arbitrary,” Stone said in an interview. “We’ve tried to reduce the arbitrariness of the cutoff values that we selected so that the researcher, academician, clinician, hospital administrator, etc., can be confident that these levels that we’re recommending are the ones that are associated with a worse prognosis for patients suffering periprocedural complications.”

The Change

The existing universal definition for MI defines events following PCI according to an increase in cardiac troponin to greater than five times the 99th percentile upper reference limit (URL) within 48 hours when baseline levels are normal, with confirmation by electrocardiogram (ECG), imaging, or symptoms.

For CABG-related MI, the increase must be more than 10 times the 99th percentile URL within 48 hours when baseline levels are normal, with confirmation by ECG, angiography, or imaging.

But, Stone and colleagues wrote, the relationship between that degree of troponin elevation after a revascularization procedure and prognosis is not as strong as the association between a CK-MB elevation and patient outcomes.

Using a small elevation in troponin to define a post-procedure MI could find myocardial necrosis that is unlikely to be associated with poor clinical outcomes, which could have far-reaching implications, they wrote.

“Widespread adoption of an MI definition not clearly linked to subsequent adverse events such as mortality or heart failure may have serious consequences for the appropriate assessment of devices and therapies, may affect clinical care pathways, and may result in misinterpretation of physician competence,” they wrote.

To address that issue, the expert panel convened by SCAI sought to define clinically relevant MI after PCI or CABG.

A clinically relevant MI is defined in the new document based on an increase of at least 10 times the upper limit of normal in the level of CK-MB within 48 hours after a revascularization procedure when baseline levels are normal.

When the CK-MB level is not available, then an increase in troponin I or T of at least 70 times the upper limit of normal can be used to define a clinically relevant MI, according to the authors.

However, if an ECG shows new pathologic Q-waves in at least two contiguous leads or a new persistent left bundle branch block, then the thresholds can be lowered to at least five times and at least 35 times the upper limit of normal for CK-MB and troponin, respectively.

Further guidance is provided for identifying clinically relevant post-procedure MIs when the cardiac biomarker levels are elevated at baseline.

Dueling Definitions

Co-chairman of the Task Force for the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction, Harvey White, DSc, of Auckland City Hospital in Auckland, New Zealand, noted some limitations of the new definition, including the lack of a requirement for ischemic symptoms.

“Ischemic symptoms have always been a basic tenet of the diagnosis of MI, and it should be no different for a [PCI-related] MI,” he wrote in an accompanying editorial.

In addition, with the use of such large elevations in biomarker levels in the new definition, “there will be very few PCI-related events identified, and an opportunity to improve patient outcomes may be lost,” he wrote.

Troponin should remain the preferred biomarker over CK-MB, White argued, pointing to variability in and analytical issues with CK-MB assays, the need for sex-specific cutoffs for CK-MB levels, the need for higher thresholds of CK-MB to determine abnormalities because all individuals have circulating levels of the biomarker, and the reduced sensitivity and specificity of CK-MB.

Also, he said, CK-MB is becoming increasingly unavailable at medical centers.

“With CK-MB becoming obsolete, troponin will become the gold standard, and CK-MB will no longer have a role in defining PCI injury and infarction in clinical practice,” White wrote.

Stone admitted that troponin ultimately might be preferable to CK-MB because of its greater specificity, although the evidence does not yet support it.

“I think there’s a general desirability to move to troponins, although when you look at the data that’s out there it’s much stronger correlating CK-MB elevations to subsequent prognosis,” he said. “I think a lot of the troponin elevations are just noise or troponins are just too sensitive.”

Room for Both?

White noted in his editorial that “the rationale for the SCAI definition has been well articulated by its authors and may be appropriate in an individual trial, but it should not supplant the universal definition of MI,” he wrote.

When asked whether the new definition would replace the universal definition, Stone said there is a place for both sets of criteria.

“We would propose the clinically relevant definition be the one that is used to make most substantial decisions right now, [such as] trade-offs between efficacy and safety for new drugs and devices, in judging hospital systems and physicians, etc.,” he said. “But I do think there’s value in both, and they will both continue to evolve over time as new data becomes evident.”

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/MyocardialInfarction/42256?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2013-10-15&goback=%2Egmr_4346921%2Egde_4346921_member_5795830612724035588#%21 

Articles citing 

Third Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction

  • Improved long-term clinical outcomes in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction undergoing remote ischaemic conditioning as an adjunct to primary percutaneous coronary interventionEur Heart J. 2013;0:eht369v1-eht369

  • The role of myeloperoxidase (MPO) for prognostic evaluation in sensitive cardiac troponin I negative chest pain patients in the emergency departmentEuropean Heart Journal: Acute Cardiovascular Care. 2013;2:203-210,
  • Coronary artery bypass grafting or percutaneous revascularization in acute myocardial infarction?Interact CardioVasc Thorac Surg. 2013;0:ivt381v1-ivt381,
  • Ischemic Conditioning as an Adjunct to Percutaneous Coronary InterventionCirc Cardiovasc Interv. 2013;6:484-492,
  • High sensitivity cardiac troponin in patients with chest painBMJ. 2013;347:f4222,
  • Chest Pain and Palpitations: Taking a Closer LookCirculation. 2013;128:271-277,
  • An Updated Definition of Stroke for the 21st Century: A Statement for Healthcare Professionals From the American Heart Association/American Stroke AssociationStroke. 2013;44:2064-2089,
  • Factors Influencing the 99th Percentile of Cardiac Troponin I Evaluated in Community-Dwelling Individuals at 70 and 75 Years of AgeClin. Chem.. 2013;59:1068-1073,
  • Detection and management of asymptomatic myocardial injury after noncardiac surgeryEuropean Journal of Preventive Cardiology.2013;0:2047487313494294v1-2047487313494294,
  • Postoperative Troponin Screening: A Cardiac Cassandra?Circulation. 2013;127:2253-2256,
  • Remote Ischemic Preconditioning Improves Outcome at 6 Years After Elective Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: The CRISP Stent Trial Long-term Follow-upCirc Cardiovasc Interv. 2013;6:246-251,
  • Outcomes for Clinical Studies Assessing Drug and Revascularization Therapies for Claudication and Critical Limb Ischemia in Peripheral Artery DiseaseCirculation. 2013;127:1241-1250,
  • Prevalence, Incidence, and Implications of Silent Myocardial Infarctions in Patients With Diabetes MellitusCirculation. 2013;127:965-967,
  • 2013 ACCF/AHA Key Data Elements and Definitions for Measuring the Clinical Management and Outcomes of Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes and Coronary Artery Disease: A Report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Clinical Data Standards (Writing Committee to Develop Acute Coronary Syndromes and Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Data Standards)Circulation. 2013;127:1052-1089,
  • Clin. Chem.. 2013;59:574-576,
  • Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Versus Optimal Medical Therapy for Prevention of Spontaneous Myocardial Infarction in Subjects With Stable Ischemic Heart DiseaseCirculation. 2013;127:769-781,
  • Frequency of Myocardial Infarction and Its Relationship to Angiographic Collateral Flow in Territories Supplied by Chronically Occluded Coronary ArteriesCirculation. 2013;127:703-709,
  • The Power of More Than OneCirculation. 2013;127:665-667,
  • The curious life of the biomarkerJournal of the American Dental Association. 2013;144:126-128,
  • Persistent Increases in Cardiac Troponin Concentrations As Measured with High-Sensitivity Assays after Acute Myocardial InfarctionClin. Chem.. 2013;59:443-445,
  • 2013 ACCF/AHA Guideline for the Management of ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction: A Report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice GuidelinesCirculation. 2013;127:e362-e425,

Read Full Post »

Comment by Cardiologists posted on LinkedIn’s

European Cardiovascular Medical Devices Group, a subgroup of Cardiovascular Medical Devices Group

on Stenting for Proximal LAD Lesions: In Reference to the Invasive Procedure performed on former President George W. Bush

UPDATED on 8/7/2018

Long-Term Outcomes of Stenting the Proximal LAD

Study Questions:

What are the outcomes of patients undergoing drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation according to lesion location within or outside the proximal left anterior descending (LAD) artery?

Methods:

Among the 8,709 patients enrolled in PROTECT (Patient Related Outcomes With Endeavor Versus Cypher Stenting Trial), a multicenter percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) trial, the investigators compared the outcomes of 2,534 patients (29.1%; 3,871 lesions [31.5%]) with stents implanted in the proximal LAD with 6,172 patients (70.9%; 8,419 lesions [68.5%]) with stents implanted outside the proximal LAD. For each event, a multivariate model was constructed that examined the effect of several individual baseline clinical and angiographic characteristics, including proximal LAD target lesion, on outcomes (i.e., MACE [major adverse cardiac events], target vessel failure [TVF], and myocardial infarction [MI]).

Results:

At 4-year follow-up, death rates were the same (5.8% vs. 5.8%; p > 0.999), but more MIs occurred in the proximal LAD group (6.2% vs. 4.9%; p = 0.015). The rates of clinically driven TVF (14.8% vs. 13.5%; p = 0.109), MACE (15.0% vs. 13.7%; hazard ratio, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.97-1.31; p = 0.139), and stent thrombosis (2.1% vs. 2.0%; p = 0.800) were similar. DES type had no interaction with MACE or TVF. In multivariate analysis, the proximal LAD was a predictor for MI (p = 0.038), but not for TVF (p = 0.149) or MACE (p = 0.069).

Conclusions:

The authors concluded that proximal LAD location was associated with higher rates of MI during the long-term follow-up, but there were no differences in stent thrombosis, death, TVF, or overall MACE.

Perspective:

This post hoc analysis of a prospective, multicenter study reports no difference in the rates of death, MACE, or TVF at 4 years according to intervention at a proximal LAD or nonproximal LAD lesion. The occurrence of the predefined primary endpoint of stent thrombosis was also not dependent on whether a proximal LAD or nonproximal LAD site was treated. However, of note, stenting of proximal LAD lesions was associated with significantly higher rates of MI compared with stenting of nonproximal LAD lesions. Overall, these findings appear to suggest that proximal LAD lesions may not have additional risk in the contemporary DES era, but the higher risk of MI needs to be studied further. Future studies should compare longer-term clinical outcomes between proximal LAD PCI with DES and minimally invasive left internal mammary artery to LAD.

SOURCE

https://www.acc.org/latest-in-cardiology/journal-scans/2017/03/22/15/11/long-term-outcomes-of-stenting-the-proximal-lad

 

Stenting for Proximal LAD Lesions

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Michael Reinhardt • First, the media really should not be calling this “stent surgery” its a stent procedure just ask any post-CABG patient… Anyway it really is not possible to determine whether or not is was “unnecessary” without all the relevant patient data; which coronary vessel(s) involved, percent stenosis, etc. Actually I find it interesting that they apparently decided to stent the former president on the basis of a CT Angiogram which is not the standard of care for coronary imaging. I have to assume they performed an additional testing like a CT perfusion analysis and saw a clinically relevant defect and this support the decision to stent. Regarding the post-stent drugs cloplidigrel is not a benign drug but benefits far outweigh the downside of a sub-acute thrombosis which might result in a more serious future event = acute MI.

Rafael Beyar • This was absolutely an indicated procedure and almost all rational physician will treat a young patient with proximal LAD lesions with either a stent or bypass surgery

Dov V Shimon MD • No doubt! Proximal (‘close to origin’) LAD lesions are the leading “Widow makers”. Reestablishing of flow in the artery is saving from cardiac damage and death. Drug eluting stent have 2nd and 3rd generations with very low and acceptable reclosure rates and almost no abrupt closure (thrombosis). True, CTA is a screening test, but it astablishes the need for diagnostic and therapeutic angiogram. We, heart surgeons can provide long-term patency to the LAD using LIMA arterial bypass. The current advantage of stent is the incovenience and pain of surgery. Any responsible physician would opt the procedure even for himself, his relatives , his patients and for definitely for GW Bush.

http://www.linkedin.com/groupItem?view=&gid=3358310&type=member&item=265974376&commentID=157366758&goback=%2Egmr_3358310&report%2Esuccess=8ULbKyXO6NDvmoK7o030UNOYGZKrvdhBhypZ_w8EpQrrQI-BBjkmxwkEOwBjLE28YyDIxcyEO7_TA_giuRN#commentID_157366758

Coronary anatomy and anomalies

On the left an overview of the coronary arteries in the anterior projection.

Coronary anatomy and anomalies

RCA, LAD and Cx in the anterior projection

On the left an overview of the coronary arteries in the lateral projection.

  • Left Main or left coronary artery (LCA)
    • Left anterior descending (LAD)
      • diagonal branches (D1, D2)
      • septal branches
    • Circumflex (Cx)
      • Marginal branches (M1,M2)
  • Right coronary artery
    • Acute marginal branch (AM)
    • AV node branch
    • Posterior descending artery (PDA)

Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2004 Apr;25(4):567-71.

Isolated high-grade lesion of the proximal LAD: a stent or off-pump LIMA?

Source

Thoraxcentre, Groningen University Hospital, Groningen, The Netherlands.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES:

The objective of this study was to compare the long-term outcome of patients with an isolated high-grade stenosis of the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery randomized to percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty with stenting (PCI, stenting) or to off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (surgery).

METHODS:

Patients with an isolated high-grade stenosis (American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association classification type B2/C) of the proximal LAD were randomly assigned to stenting (n=51) or to surgery (n=51) and were followed for 3-5 years (mean 4 years). Primary composite endpoint was freedom from major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCEs), including cardiac death, myocardial infarction, stroke and repeat target vessel revascularization. Secondary endpoints were angina pectoris status and need for anti-anginal medication at follow-up. Analysis was by intention to treat.

RESULTS:

MACCEs occurred in 27.5% after stenting and 9.8% after surgery (P=0.02; absolute risk reduction 17.7%). Freedom from angina pectoris was 67% after stenting and 85% after surgery (P=0.036). Need for anti-anginal medication was significantly lower after surgery compared to stenting (P=0.002).

CONCLUSION:

Patients with an isolated high-grade lesion of the proximal LAD have a significantly better 4-year clinical outcome after off-pump coronary bypass grafting than after PCI.

Daily Dose

08/12/2013 | 5:48 PM

Was George Bush’s stent surgery really unnecessary?

By Deborah Kotz / Globe Staff

VIEW VIDEO

Ever since President George W. Bush had stent surgery last Tuesday to open a blocked artery, leading physicians who weren’t involved in his care have wondered publically why he had this “unnecessary” procedure. Large clinical trials have demonstrated that stent placement doesn’t extend lives or prevent a future heart attack or stroke in those with stable heart disease.

What’s more, Bush could wind up with complications like a reblockage where the stent was placed or excessive bruising or internal bleeding from the blood thinners that he must take likely for the next year.

Dr Richard Besser, the chief medical correspondent for ABC News, questioned why Bush had an exercise stress test as part of his routine physical exam given that he had no symptoms like chest pain or shortness of breath. The stress test indicated signs of an artery blockage.

“In people who are not having symptoms, the American Heart Association says you should not do a stress test,” Besser said, “since the value of opening that artery is to relieve the symptoms.”

Cleveland Clinic cardiologist Dr. Steve Nissen agreed in his interview with USA Today. Bush, he said, likely “got the classical thing that happens to VIP patients, when they get so-called executive physicals and they get a lot of tests that aren’t indicated. This is American medicine at its worst.”

Two physicians wrote in an Washington Post op-ed column titled “President Bush’s unnecessary surgery” that they worry that the media coverage of Bush’s stent will lead “patients to pressure their own doctors for unwarranted and excessive care.”

But none of these doctors actually treated Bush or examined his medical records, so I’m a little surprised they’re making such firm calls.

Bush, an avid biker who recently completed a 100-kilometer ride, probably shouldn’t have had the exercise stress test if he wasn’t having any heart symptoms. “Routine stress testing used to be done 20 years ago, but isn’t recommended any longer since it doesn’t have any benefit,” said Brigham and Women’s cardiologist Dr. Christopher Cannon.

But Bush’s spokesman insisted the stent was necessary after followup heart imaging via a CT angiogram “confirmed a blockage that required opening.”

Cannon said Bush’s doctors may have seen signs that blood flow wasn’t getting to a significant part of the heart muscle, a condition known as ischemia. Researchers have found that those with moderate to severe ischemia appear to experience a reduction in fatal heart attacks when they have a stent placement along with medical therapy, rather than just taking medications alone. (Larger studies, though, are needed to confirm this finding.)

“If a blockage occurs at the very start of the artery and it’s extensive—95 percent blocked—then chances are it will cause significant ischemia,” Cannon said. While severe ischemia usually causes light-headedness or dizziness during exercise, Bush may have had more moderate ischemia that didn’t cause such symptoms.

It’s impossible to know for certain, he added, without seeing his medical records firsthand.

http://www.boston.com/lifestyle/health/blogs/daily-dose/2013/08/12/was-george-bush-stent-surgery-really-unnecessary/DzklhNCGVlgriNxgpKZtuO/blog.html

President Bush’s unnecessary heart surgery

  • By Vinay Prasad and Adam Cifu, Published: August 9

Vinay Prasad is chief fellow of medical oncology at the National Cancer Institute and the National Institutes of Health. Adam Cifu is a professor of medicine at the University of Chicago.

Former president George W. Bush, widely regarded as a model of physical fitness, received a coronary artery stent on Tuesday. Few facts are known about the case, but what is known suggests the procedure was unnecessary.

Before he underwent his annual physical, Mr. Bush reportedly had no symptoms. Quite the opposite: His exercise tolerance was astonishing for his age, 67. He rode more than 30 miles in the heat on a bike ride for veterans injured in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

If Mr. Bush had visited a general internist practicing sound, evidence-based care, he would not have had cardiac testing. Instead, the doctor would have had conducted age-appropriate cancer screening. For the former president, this would include only colon cancer screening. It no longer would include even prostate-specific antigen testing for cancer. The doctor would have screened for cholesterol, checked for hypertension and made sure the patient was up to date on age-appropriate vaccinations, including those for pneumococcal pneumonia and shingles. Presumably Mr. Bush got these things, and he got the cardiac test as well.What value does a stress test add for an otherwise healthy 67-year-old?No study has shown that this examination improves outcomes. The trials that have been done for so-called routine stress testing examined higher-risk patients. They found that performing stress tests on people at high risk of cardiovascular disease may detect blockages but does not improve symptoms or survival. Routine stress testing does, however, increase the use of procedures such as coronary stenting.Unfortunately, Mr. Bush, like many VIPs, may be paying the price of these in-depth investigations. His stress test revealed an abnormality, prompting another test: a CT angiogram. This study showed a blockage, which was stented open during an invasive procedure. It is worth noting that at least two large randomized trials show that stenting these sorts of lesions does not improve survival. Because Mr. Bush had no symptoms, it is impossible that he felt better after these procedures.

Instead, George W. Bush will have to take two blood thinners, aspirin and Plavix, for at least a month and probably a year. (The amount of time a blood thinner is needed depends on the type of stent placed). While he takes these medications, he will have a higher risk of bleeding complications with no real benefit.

Although this may seem like an issue important only to the former president, consider the following: Although the price of excessive screening of so-called VIPs is usually paid for privately, follow-up tests, only “necessary” because of the initial unnecessary screening test, are usually paid for by Medicare, further stressing our health-care system. The media coverage of interventions like Mr. Bush’s also leads patients to pressure their own doctors for unwarranted and excessive care.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/president-bushs-unnecessary-heart-surgery/2013/08/09/c91c439c-0041-11e3-9a3e-916de805f65d_story.html

Read Full Post »

Normal and Anomalous Coronary Arteries: Dual Source CT in Cardiothoracic Imaging

Reporters: Justin D Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Coronary anatomy and anomalies

“Coronary” describes the crown-like position of arteries on the heart that provide its nutrient blood supply. The heart does not live off of the blood in its chambers, but rather receives its nutrient perfusion from branches of the aorta, like all other organs. The most relied on method to exam coronary artery anatomy is angiography – xray image movies obtained while the blood is opacified by injection of iodine (high atomic number to block xrays) to provide a contrast between arterial flow channel (the lumen) and the surrounding tissues. Computed tomography is providing a second-best alternative with 3D reconstructions that can be obtained less invasively (no catheters), but it often fails to see the posterior descending artery (PDA) well, and is lower in resolution (point-discrimination detail) than xray angiography (XRA). Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) comes in as a distant third place method for examining coronary anatomy (lower quality, lower reliability), but non-invasive with no ionizing radiation. A major goal of defining coronary anatomy in individual patients is to identify coronary artery disease (CAD) and to clarify best options for management – to relieve angina and to avoid adverse consequences, e.g., heart attacks (myocardial infarction), heart failure (CHF) and death. The COURAGE trial showed that for many, aggressive medical management with statins and blood pressure control may obviate need for percutaneous or surgical interventions to control angina and minimize the risk of adverse outcomes. Patients with blockage of the left main coronary artery, or two vessel blockage including proximal left anterior descending (LAD) especially with below normal ejection fraction may be better off in the long run with bypass surgery. Therefore less invasive imaging sufficient to rule out left main disease and proximal LAD disease may suffice for decision making (except that the BARI trial results have not been overturned in favoring bypass surgery for diabetics).

On the left an overview of the coronary arteries in the anterior projection.

Coronary anatomy and anomalies

  • Left Main or left coronary artery (LCA)
    • Left anterior descending (LAD)
      • diagonal branches (D1, D2)
      • septal branches
    • Circumflex (Cx)
      • Marginal branches (M1,M2)
  • Right coronary artery
    • Acute marginal branch (AM)
    • AV node branch
    • Posterior descending artery (PDA)
RCA, LAD and Cx in the anterior projection

On the left an overview of the coronary arteries in the lateral projection.

  • Left Main or left coronary artery (LCA)
    • Left anterior descending (LAD)
      • diagonal branches (D1, D2)
      • septal branches
    • Circumflex (Cx)
      • Marginal branches (M1,M2)
  • Right coronary artery
    • Acute marginal branch (AM)
    • AV node branch
    • Posterior descending artery (PDA)

RCA, LAD and Cx in the right anterior oblique projection
On the left an overview of the coronary arteries in the lateral projection.

  • Left Main or left coronary artery (LCA)
    • Left anterior descending (LAD)
      • diagonal branches (D1, D2)
      • septal branches
    • Circumflex (Cx)
      • Marginal branches (M1,M2)
  • Right coronary artery
    • Acute marginal branch (AM)
    • AV node branch
    • Posterior descending artery (PDA)

RCA, LAD and Cx in the lateral projection

Left Coronary Artery (LCA)

The left coronary artery (LCA) is also known as the left main.
The LCA arises from the left coronary cusp.

The aortic valve has three leaflets, each having a cusp or cup-like configuration.
These are known as the left coronary cusp (L), the right coronary cusp (R) and the posterior non-coronary cusp (N).
Just above the aortic valves there are anatomic dilations of the ascending aorta, also known as the sinus of Valsalva. The left aortic sinus gives rise to the left coronary artery.
The right aortic sinus which lies anteriorly, gives rise to the right coronary artery.
The non-coronary sinus is postioned on the right side.

Left coronary (LC), right coronary (RC) and posterior non-coronary (NC) cusp
The LCA divides almost immediately into the circumflex artery (Cx) and left anterior descending artery (LAD).
On the left an axial CT-image.
The LCA travels between the right ventricle outflow tract anteriorly and the left atrium posteriorly and divides into LAD and Cx.

On the image on the left we see the left main artery dividing into

  • Cx with obtuse marginal branch (OM)
  • LAD with diagonal branches (DB)

On volume rendered images the left atrial appendage needs to be removed to get a good look on the LCA.
In 15% of cases a third branch arises in between the LAD and the Cx, known as the ramus intermedius or intermediate branch.
This intermediate branche behaves as a diagonal branch of the Cx.
Left Anterior Descending (LAD)
The LAD travels in the anterior interventricular groove and continues up to the apex of the heart.
The LAD supplies the anterior part of the septum with septal branches and the anterior wall of the left ventricle with diagonal branches.
The LAD supplies most of the left ventricle and also the AV-bundle.Mnemonic: Diagonal branches arise from the LAD.

CT image of the LAD in RAO projection
The diagonal branches come off the LAD and run laterally to supply the antero-lateral wall of the left ventricle.
The first diagonal branch serves as the boundary between the proximal and mid portion of the LAD (2).
There can be one or more diagonal branches: D1, D2 , etc.
Circumflex (Cx)
The Cx lies in the left AV groove between the left atrium and left ventricle and supplies the vessels of the lateral wall of the left ventricle.
These vessels are known as obtuse marginals (M1, M2…), because they supply the lateral margin of the left ventricle and branch off with an obtuse angle.
In most cases the Cx ends as an obtuse marginal branch, but 10% of patients have a left dominant circulation in which the Cx also supplies the posterior descending artery (PDA).Mnemonic: Marginal branches arise from the Cx and supply the lateral Margin of the left ventricle.

Circumflex and LAD seen in Lateral projection
Right Coronary Artery (RCA)
The right coronary artery arises from the anterior sinus of Valsalva and courses through the right atrioventricular (AV) groove between the right artium and right ventricle to the inferior part of the septum.
In 50-60% the first branch of the RCA is the small conus branch, that supplies the right ventricle outflow tract.
In 20-30% the conus branch arises directly from the aorta.
In 60% a sinus node artery arises as second branch of the RCA, that runs posteriorly to the SA-node (in 40% it originates from the Cx).
The next branches are some diagonals that run anteriorly to supply the anterior wall of the right ventricle.
The large acute marginal branch (AM) comes off with anacute angle and runs along the margin of the right ventricle above the diaphragm.
The RCA continues in the AV groove posteriorly and gives off a branch to the AV node.
In 65% of cases the posterior descending artery (PDA) is a branch of the RCA (right dominant circulation).
The PDA supplies the inferior wall of the left ventricle and inferior part of the septum.
RCA, LAD and LCx in Anterior projection
On the image on the far left we see the most common situation, in which the RCA comes off the right cusp and will provide the conus branch at a lower level (not shown).
On the image next to it, we see a conus branch, that comes off directly from the aorta.
LEFT: RCA comes off the right sinus of Valsalva
RIGHT: Conus artery comes off directly from the aorta
The large acute marginal branch (AM) supplies the lateral wall of the right ventricle.
In this case there is a right dominant circulation, because the posterior descending artery (PDA) comes off the RCA.
Coronary Anomalies

Coronary anomalies are uncommon with a prevalence of 1%.
Early detection and evaluation of coronary artery anomalies is essential because of their potential association with myocardial ischemia and sudden death (3).
With the increased use of cardiac-CT, we will see these anomalies more frequently.

Coronary anomalies can be differentiated into anomalies of the origin, the course and termination (Table).

The illustration in the left upper corner is the most common and clinically significant anomaly.
There is an anomalous origin of the LCA from the right sinus of Valsalva and the LCA courses between the aorta and pulmonary artery.
This interarterial course can lead to compression of the LCA (yellow arrows) resulting in myocardial ischemia.

The other anomalies in the figure on the left are not hemodynamically significant.

Interarterial LCA

On the left images of a patient with an anomalous origin of the LCA from the right sinus of Valsalva and coursing between the aorta and pulmonary artery.
Sudden death is frequently observed in these patients.

ALCAPA

On the left images of a patient with an anomalous origin of the LCA from the pulmonary artery, also known as ALCAPA.
ALCAPA results in the left ventricular myocardium being perfused by relatively desaturated blood under low pressure, leading to myocardial ischemia.
ALCAPA is a rare, congenital cardiac anomaly accounting for approximately 0.25-0.5% of all congenital heart diseases.
Approximately 85% of patients present with clinical symptoms of CHF within the first 1-2 months of life.

Myocardial bridging

Myocardial bridging is most commonly observed of the LAD (figure).
The depth of the vessel under the myocardium is more important that the lenght of the myocardial bridging.
There is debate, whether some of these myocardial bridges are hemodynamically significant.

Fistula

On the image on the left we see a large LAD giving rise to a large septal branch that terminates in the right ventricle (blue arrow).

Left to right shunt: septal branch of LAD teminates in right ventricle
REFERENCES
  1. Introduction to cardiothoracic imaging
    by Carl Jaffe and Patrick J. Lynch
  2. Cardiology Site
    by M. Abdulla
    This site includes instructional movies, 3-D animation, panoramic views, online quiz, interactive video-clips, interactive heart sounds & murmurs and interactive echocardiograms.
  3. Visualization of Anomalous Coronary Arteries on Dual Source Computed Tomography
    by G.J. de Jonge et al
    European Radiology, Volume 18, Number 11 / November, 2008, 2425-2432

SOURCE

Robin Smithuis and Tineke Wilems
Radiology department of the Rijnland Hospital Leiderdorp and the University Medical Centre Groningen, the Netherlands.
http://rad.desk.nl/en/48275120e2ed5 

 

Read Full Post »

Stent Design and Thrombosis:  Bifurcation Intervention, Drug Eluting Stents (DES) and Biodegrable Stents

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

UPDATED 2/8/2014

Reva Completes Drug-Eluting Bioresorbable Stent Trial Enrollment

January 24, 2014
Reva Medical Clinical Trial ReZolve2 Bioresorbable Stent
January 24, 2014 — Reva Medical Inc. has completed enrollment in the clinical trial of the ReZolve2 drug-eluting bioresorbable scaffold. A total of 112 patients from three continents have been enrolled in the trial to provide the data needed to apply for CE marking.

The company anticipates filing a CE mark application before the end of 2014. It plans to report an update on trial data at the Paris Course on Revascularization (EuroPCR) in Paris, France, May 2014.

For more information: http://www.teamreva.com

This article has the following SIX Parts:

Part I: Bifurcation Intervention – Stent Design and Thrombosis

Part II: Biodegradable Polymer DES Reduce Stent Thrombosis Rates vs. Durable Polymer DES

Part III: Stent Flexibility versus Stent Concertina Longitudinal Deformation Effect on Outcomes

Part IV: Stent Thrombosis Through the Generations of Stent Design

Part V: Stent Thrombosis in Randomized Trials of Drug-Eluting Stents: Reappraisal of the Synthesis of Evidence!

Part VI. Duration of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy following Zotarolimus-Eluting Stents and A New Strategy for Discontinuation of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy

Conclusions by Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

 

Part I

Bifurcation Intervention – Stent Design and Thrombosis

 

The 5 Ts of Bifurcation Intervention: Type, Technique, Two Stents, T-Stenting, Trials

Ron Waksman, MD, FACC; Laurent Bonello, MD

Editorials published in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions reflect the views of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions or the American College of Cardiology.

J Am Coll Cardiol Intv. 2008;1(4):366-368. doi:10.1016/j.jcin.2008.06.006

http://interventions.onlinejacc.org/article.aspx?articleid=1110233

Bifurcation, the division of an artery into 2 branches, is a common anatomy feature of the human coronary tree and is recognized as a common site for atherosclerotic plaque buildup due to the differences in coronary flow, turbulence, and shear stress at the site of the bifurcation. The prevalence of bifurcation stenosis in the human coronary tree is reported to be between 15% to 20% of all interventions and is considered complex and challenging for percutaneous intervention.

Numerous techniques and devices have been proposed to address the treatment of bifurcation lesions: balloon angioplasty, metallic stents, drug-eluting stents (DES), newly designed stents with dedicated access to the side branch, and full bifurcated stents. Clearly, the interest in the treatment of bifurcation stenting has increased with the availability to significantly reduce the recurrence rate, but this was associated with the increasing fear of stent thrombosis. Despite this extensive body of work and the latest innovations of 2008, there is not a “one size fits all” solution to the bifurcation puzzle, while the optimal percutaneous coronary intervention technique remains undetermined.

In this issue of JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions, Routledge et al. (1) present 2-year outcome data of 477 patients treated for bifurcation coronary disease with provisional side branch T-stenting using DES, and claim a systematic approach feasible for 90% of the patients, with acceptable efficacy and safety profiles. This editorial is written in response to this provocative study and will cover the 5 Ts of bifurcation stenting: Type of bifurcation, Techniques, Two stents versus one, T-stenting, and Trial design.

Types Of Bifurcation

Part of the complexity in treating bifurcation lesions and applying technique standardization is in regard to the numerous anatomic patterns of bifurcation stenosis and the lack of consistent, reliable methodology. Further, the variations in anatomy, angulations, and location of the disease within the bifurcation have led to the development of numerous classifications of bifurcation lesions, with differentiation between “true” bifurcation (both the main and the branch are diseased) and “false” bifurcation (either the main or the branch is disease) based on angiography. The most popular and intuitive classification is that of Medina et al. (2), which identifies at least 7 types of bifurcation involving the proximal main branch, the distal main branch, and the side branch, with different variations. If we add this to the classification of the various potential angulations between the main and the side branches, the sizes of the parent vessel and the side branch, and the different potential morphologies of the diseased segment (calcification, fibrosis, and so on), we can identify nearly endless anatomic and morphologic configurations of bifurcations types (3).

Technique

2 stents versus 1

Numerous techniques have been proposed for the treatment of bifurcation lesions. The first decision that the operator must make is whether the procedure will involve 1 or 2 stents. The most important information relates to the size of the side branch and the degree of the disease in this branch. Or do we really care about the side branch? Initially, the thought of using 2 stents for all bifurcated lesions was appealing because this approach usually resulted in an optimal angiographic success rate. Among the most popular techniques that employed the use of 2 stents are the culotte, crush, V-stenting, T-stenting, and simultaneous kissing stents (4). However, after numerous reports of high rates of late complications, including an increase in stent thrombosis and restenosis frequency, systematical use of 2 stents did not live up to expectations (58). These poor outcomes were observed regardless of the technique used and thus discouraged the liberal use of 2 stents. Therefore, the provisional strategy gained ground: try 1 stent first, and, if the result is not acceptable (dissection, impaired lumen, or flow of the other branch), use a second stent for the side branch. The superiority of such a provisional approach over a 2-stent technique was confirmed by the Nordic Bifurcation study (9). The results of this study had operators favoring the provisional rather than the 2-stent approach. However, many questions still remain regarding this approach: can we predict which bifurcation will require 2, rather than 1 stent? In how many patients is the provisional approach feasible? If a second stent is required, what then is the optimal technique for implantation of the second stent? Is provisional stenting still superior to the 2-stent approach with the new generation of stents available? And lastly, are the latest technique modifications, including pre- and post-kissing, clinically beneficial?

The present study demonstrated that provisional stenting is feasible in 90% of all patients, and those who received a second stent in the side branch, 28%, had similar long-term outcomes as those treated with 1 stent. The outcome of this study is similar to that of the Nordic Bifurcation study, which observed no difference in outcomes at 6 months’ follow-up between 1 and 2 stents (9). Finally, the latest Nordic Bifurcation Stent Technique study, comparing the culotte and crush techniques, reported low rates of angiographic restenosis and major adverse cardiac events for both techniques (10), with similar angiographic and clinical outcomes as the provisional approach with T-stenting reported in the Routledge et al. study (1). This leaves us with the question of whether, in 2008, provisional stenting is still superior to 2 stents when an improved technique is applied and new-generation stents are used?

T-stenting

Use of the provisional T-stenting technique is gaining interest because of its simplicity and subsequent reports of good mid-term outcomes (1113). As illustrated in the present report by Routledge et al. (1), it is feasible in a large majority of patients and is associated with low rates of recurrent events during long-term follow-up. In the past, the technique was described to resolve dissections of a side branch (8) or as a new technique for the use of 2 stents for the treatment of bifurcation lesions (11). In the present study, the authors used provisional T-stenting as the default technique. From a technical point of view, provisional T-stenting offers several advantages compared with other bifurcation techniques: it is simple to perform in most cases, and it limits the need for a second stent, as illustrated by the low rate of stenting in the side branch in the present study. One technical aspect of the procedure remains in question: is kissing post-procedure mandatory in the provisional T-stenting approach with 1 or 2 stents? Bench testing observed that the final kissing balloon may have several interesting advantages: it opens the stent cells to the side branch, it allows the side branch ostium to be at least partially covered by stent struts, and it prevents the main branch stent from becoming deformed by side branch dilation. Further, in previous studies involving crush stenting, kissing balloon was shown to be critical in preventing restenosis (14). Nevertheless, the clinical impact of a final kissing balloon in provisional T-stenting must be established in future trials. Several limitations should be considered with T-stenting: it is not applicable for all lesions, it is dependent on the bifurcation angle and cannot be applied to angles <40°; the second stent, if needed, may not be able to fully cover the ostium, which will result in switching to a mini-crush technique, and like other techniques, there is a learning curve. Nevertheless, among today’s available options, the provisional T-stenting technique seems to be the simplest and is associated with favorable long-term outcomes.

Table 1 Comparison of Bifurcation Studies in the DES Era

Bifurcation stenting continues to challenge the interventional cardiologist. Despite the recent literature, including the present manuscript, there is a lack of consensus on an array of important issues, such as: Which branches deserve protection? Should provisional stenting be the default strategy of bifurcation stenting? Should we always pre-dilate the side branch? And if 2 stents are required, which technique would be the best? Is kissing always mandatory for both branches? Are DES more thrombogenic? And finally, how will the special dedicated bifurcated stents be integrated into current practice? With further trials and perhaps the sixth T in bifurcation stenting (Time), the answers to these important questions will be answered.

References

1 Routledge  H.C., Morice  M.-C., Lefèvre  T.; 2-year outcome of patients treated for bifurcation coronary disease with provisional side branch T-stenting using drug-eluting stents. J Am Coll Cardiol Intv. 1 2008:358-365.

2 Medina  A., Suárez de Lezo  J., Pan  M.; A new classification of coronary bifurcation lesions. Rev Esp Cardiol. 59 2006:183

3 Thomas  M., Hildick-Smith  D., Louvard  Y.; Percutaneous coronary intervention for bifurcation disease. A consensus view from the first meeting of the European bifurcation club. Euro Intervention. 2 2006:149-153.

4 Louvard  I., Lefevre  T., Morice  M.C.; Percutaneous coronary intervention for bifurcation coronary disease. Heart. 90 2004:713-722.

5 Iakovou  I., Schmidt  T., Bonizzoni  E.; Incidence, predictors, and outcome of thrombosis after successful implantation of drug-eluting stents. JAMA. 293 2005:2126-2130.

6 Finn  A.V., Kolodgie  F.D., Harnek  J.; Differential response of delayed healing and persistent inflammation at sites of overlapping sirolimus- or paclitaxel-eluting stents. Circulation. 112 2005:270-278.

7 Daemen  J., Wenaweser  P., Tsuchida  K.; Early and late coronary stent thrombosis of sirolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting stents in routine clinical practice: data from a large two-institutional cohort study. Lancet. 369 2007:667-678.

8 Carrie  D., Karouny  E., Chouairi  S., Puel  J.; “T” shaped stent placement: a technique for the treatment of dissected bifurcation lesions. Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn. 37 1996:311-313.

9 Steigen  T.K., Maeng  M., Wiseth  R.; Randomized study on simple versus complex stenting of coronary artery bifurcation lesions: the Nordic Bifurcation study. Circulation. 114 2006:1955-1961.

10 Gunnes P, Niemela M, Kervinen K, et al, for the Nordic-Baltic PCI Study Group. Eight months angiographic follow-up in patients randomized to crush or culotte stenting of coronary artery bifurcation lesions. The Nordic Bifurcation Stent Technique study. Paper presented at: ACC 2008 Late Breaking Trials; April 1, 2008; Chicago, IL.

11 Palvakis  G., de Man  F., Hamer  B., Doevendas  P., Stella  P.R.; Registry of new technique on coronary bifurcation lesions: the Utrech-“T” experience. Euro Intervention. 3 2007:262-268.

12 Pan  M., Suárez de Lezo  J., Medina  A.; Drug-eluting stents for the treatment of bifurcation lesions: a randomized comparison between paclitaxel and sirolimus stents. Am Heart J. 153 2007:15-17.

13 Ormiston  J.A., Webster  M.W., El Jack  S.; Drug-eluting stents for coronary bifurcations: bench testing of provisional side-branch strategies. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 67 2006:49-55.

14 Ge  L., Airoldi  F., Iakovou  I.; Clinical and angiographic outcome after implantation of drug-eluting stents in bifurcation lesions with the crush stent technique: importance of final kissing balloon post-dilation. J Am Coll Cardiol. 46 2005:613-620.

15 Hoye  A., Iakovou  I., Ge  L.; Long-term outcomes after stenting of bifurcation lesions with the “crush” technique: predictors of an adverse outcome. J Am Coll Cardiol. 47 2006:1949-1958.

16 Sharma  S.K.; Simultaneous kissing drug-eluting stent technique for percutaneous treatment of bifurcation lesions in large-size vessels. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 65 2005:10-16.

17 Moussa  I., Costa  R.A., Leon  M.B.; A prospective registry to evaluate sirolimus-eluting stents implanted at coronary bifurcation lesions using the “crush technique”. Am J Cardiol. 97 2006:1317-1321.

18 Yanagi  D., Shirai  K., Takamiya  Y.; Results of provisional stenting with a sirolimus-eluting stent for bifurcation lesion: multicenter study in Japan. J Cardiol. 51 2008:89-94.

19 Di Mario  C., Morici  N., Godino  C.; Predictors of restenosis after treatment of bifurcational lesions with paclitaxel eluting stents: a multicenter prospective registry of 150 consecutive patients. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 69 2007:416-424.

20 Tsuchida  K., Colombo  A., Lefèvre  T.; The clinical outcome of percutaneous treatment of bifurcation lesions in multivessel coronary artery disease with the sirolimus-eluting stent: insights from the Arterial Revascularization Therapies Study part II (ARTS II). Eur Heart J. 28 2007:433-442.

SOURCE

J Am Coll Cardiol Intv. 2008;1(4):366-368. doi:10.1016/j.jcin.2008.06.006

http://interventions.onlinejacc.org/article.aspx?articleid=1110233

 

Bifurcation Stenting

David Hildick-Smith, MD

Consultant Cardiologist and Director of Cardiac Research

Brighton-Sussex University Hospital NHS Trust

Brighton, UK

Slide 1

Bifurcation stenting and its various ramifications in the modern cardiology world. The objectives of this presentation are to talk about some of the difficulties of bifurcation stenting, to summarize the recent study data, and to talk a little bit about dedicated stent systems, as well.

Dedicated Bifurcation Stent Systems – Main types:

Side branch facilitation

Side branch stenting incorporated

Main branch stenting with enhanced access

True dedicated systems

Slide 32

So we then have the issue of dedicated stent systems. Are they the answer to some of these questions? Are they going to bail us out of these difficult geometric issues of bifurcations? There are a number of dedicated stent systems in development and available at the moment, and they fall into a few different groups. There are systems which simply facilitate side branch access. There are systems which actually incorporate side branch stenting as the primary philosophy. There are those which are essentially a main branch stent with enhanced access. And then there are the truly dedicated systems.

Bifurcation Stenting: Should You Keep it Simple

You Keep it Simple

Facilitation

Increasing success of provisional T

Slide 33

If we look at the facilitation group, there are stent systems available where there’s a wire that is integral to the balloon system, and will perhaps then facilitate getting into the side branch, and may certainly facilitate making sure that you are,

Side Branch Ostial Coverage Stents:

Scaffold side branch ostium

Allow subsequent main vessel stenting

The side branch ostial coverage stents are intended to scaffold the side branch and retain main vessel stenting capabilities. There are a couple of stents of this nature on the market at the moment which are undergoing clinical trials to see their general applicability.

Main Vessel Enhanced Access Stents

Pop-up/expand into side vessel

Improve subsequent or immediate access to side branch

Slide 35

The next group is the main vessel enhanced access stents, which, either through a pop-up mechanism with mechanical scaffolding of the side branch ostium, or with a proximal stent which is self-expanding, enhance the access to the side branch, so that you have both immediate access and subsequent access. Which is one of the things that people worry about in this situation, which is, what happens if you have to come back to that side branch vessel a few months later? Will you be able to gain access to it? So these tools may have a role there.

True Dedicated Bifurcation Stent

Stenting of both branches

Slide 36

The fourth group is the true dedicated bifurcation stent. These are clearly the most useful, but of course, mechanically and from an engineering point of view, the most difficult to create and make work. They will certainly have a potential role in bifurcation stenting, but there’s a little  way to go before they could be used in a wide manner.

Slide 37

The dedicated systems, while most are quite ingenious, unfortunately most will not survive in their current format. But the true dedicated bifurcation stent will certainly have a role in the left main. And, as we come back increasingly from these bifurcations to the left main and get a mandate to be able to treat that, this is an area where there will be a significant place for dedicated bifurcation stent systems.

Conclusions

• Bifurcations remain troublesome

• Provisional T stenting is the gold standard

• Subsets of bifurcations require complex strategies

• Large side branches

• Longer ostial disease

• Current complex strategies fail us

• Crush fails more than culotte

• Dedicated devices will have a role

• Large bifurcations in main coronary tree

• Left main

Slide 38

In conclusion, bifurcation stenting is still a troublesome area. Provisional T stenting is the gold standard approach across the board, but we mustn’t forget that there may well be, and I believe there are, subsets of bifurcations which do require a complex strategy. These are the ones with large side branches and significant length of disease at the ostium of that side branch. The current complex strategies do fail from a mechanical point of view, and in that respect crush fails more than culotte. Although it’s a difficult time for dedicated devices at the moment, I think they will have a role, particularly in large bifurcations in the main coronary tree and, most particularly of all, in the left main stem.

SOURCE

http://www.theheart.org/documents/satellite_programs/intervsurgery/913801/BifurcationStenting_REVISED_FINAL.pdf

Part II

Biodegradable Polymer DES Reduce Stent Thrombosis Rates vs. Durable Polymer DES

March 27, 2012 — Biodegradable polymer drug-eluting stents (DES) provide better long-term safety and efficacy than durable polymer DES, according to findings from an analysis of three major clinical trials

  • ISAR-TEST 3,
  • ISAR-TEST 4 and
  • LEADERS.

The data were presented at at the American College of Cardiology’s 61st Annual Scientific Session. The findings provide the first combined long-term data on the comparison between biodegradable polymer DES and durable polymer DES. Designed to improve long-term clinical outcomes while also shortening healing time, biodegradable polymer DES are a new generation of DES that have undergone little research and thus have yet to substantiate its claims. The three analyzed studies showed that after four years, use of biodegradable polymer DES resulted in

  • lower rates of target lesion revascularization,
  • definite stent thrombosis and
  • cardiac death and
  • heart attack than durable polymer DES.

“Because it is often difficult to design individual trials to test for differences in rarely occurring adverse events [like stent clotting], we pooled the data from the three largest trials to see if any differences between the two stent types could be seen,” said co-lead investigator Robert A. Byrne, M.B., B.Ch., Ph.D., a cardiologist at Deutsches Herzzentrum in Munich, Germany. “In addition, by including surveillance out to four years, this helped us better capture the differences between the two stents, as benefit was expected to first emerge with long-term follow-up.”

Among all three analyzed trials, 2,358 patients were randomly assigned to angioplasty with a biodegradable polymer DES (sirolimus-eluting = 1,501; biolimus-eluting = 857), while 1,704 patients were treated with a durable polymer SES (all sirolimus-eluting).

At the four-year follow-up point, the researchers found that the risk of target lesion revascularization (the study’s primary efficacy endpoint) was significantly lower among those patients treated with a biodegradable polymer DES than for those treated with a durable polymer DES (hazard ratio [HR] 0.82, 95 percent confidence interval [CI] 0.68-0.98, P=0.029). In addition, the risk of having a blood clot, called stent thrombosis (the study’s primary safety endpoint), was also significantly lower for those patients treated with a biodegradable polymer DES compared to those treated with a durable polymer DES (HR 0.56, 95 percent CI 0.35-0.90, P=0.015). This was driven by a lower risk of very late stent thrombosis (clots occurring more than one year after angioplasty) for the biodegradable polymer group (HR 0.22, 95 percent CI 0.08-0.61, P=0.004).

Furthermore, the incidence of heart attack late after stenting was lower for patients treated with biodegradable polymer versus durable polymer stents (HR 0.59, 95 percent CI 0.73-0.95, P=0.031).

While the arrival of DES has allowed interventionalists to provide treatment for more complex patients, concerns have arisen about the stents’ long-term safety, particularly concerning stent thrombosis. As a result, the polymer coating on the first-generation stents was targeted as an area for improvement. Specifically, the durable polymer remains in the coronary artery wall beyond the time when its useful function is served. This may cause delayed healing and a hypersensitivity reaction, leading to inflammation and stent thrombosis.

As a potential solution to these problems, new-generation stents with a bioabsorbable polymer were created. This polymer, which fully degrades and leaves a bare-metal stent in place, has been suggested to shorten healing time and cause less inflammation and subsequent stent thrombosis.

“These findings show that biodegradable polymer DES can provide better long-term safety and efficacy,” said Byrne. “This advantage, coupled with a shortened healing time compared with durable polymer DES, means that biodegradable polymer stents look to become an important tool for the interventional cardiologist in everyday practice.”

The current analysis was industry independent, supported in part by a grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation, and conducted at the ISAR Research Center in Munich, Germany, and the Clinical Trials Unit in Bern, Switzerland.

This study was simultaneously published in the European Heart Journal and was released online at the time of presentation.

The results offer a promising outlook for Boston Scientific’s Synergy DES, now in development. It uses the same platform stent as the Ion and Promus, but instead of a duable polymer it uses abluminal biodegradable polymer containing everolimus. The company presented its first-in-man study at TCT 2011 and hopes to begin its EVOLVE II U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) investigational decive exemption trial later this year.

For more information: www.acc.org

Biosensensors BioMatrix Flex was among the stents included in this study. It uses an abluminal, biodegradable polymer as a carrier for its BA9 drug.

http://www.dicardiology.com/article/biodegradable-polymer-des-reduce-stent-thrombosis-rates

First Patient Enrolled in Dissolving Drug-Polymer Coronary Stent Trial

February 21, 2011 – The first patient has been enrolled the DESSOLVE II study to support CE mark for a coronary stent that uses a bioresorbable drug polymer. The MiStent drug-eluting coronary stent system (MiStent DES), by Micell Technologies.

The trial involves treatment of patients with de novo lesions in the native coronary arteries. Stefan Verheye, M.D., Ph.D. at Middelheim Hospital, Antwerp, Belgium enrolled the first patient in the study.

The MiStent DES employs supercritical fluid technology, which applies a precisely controlled absorbable polymer – active drug (sirolimus) matrix onto a cobalt-chromium stent. The polymer dissolves and releases the drug into the surrounding tissue in a controlled manner, designed to optimize dosing of the drug throughout the affected artery. In preclinical trials, the drug completely elutes and the polymer is eliminated from the stent within 45 to 60 days in-vivo, resulting in a bare-metal stent.

DESSOLVE II is a prospective, controlled, 2:1 unbalanced randomized, multicenter study of approximately 270 patients. Patients will be enrolled at 26 clinical sites in Europe, New Zealand and Australia. Candidates for the trial are patients with documented stable or unstable angina pectoris or ischemia. The primary endpoint is superiority of MiStent DES in minimizing in-stent late lumen loss at nine months, compared to Medtronic’s Endeavor DES, as measured with angiography in treated de-novo lesions ranging in diameter from 2.5 to 3.5 mm and amenable to treatment with a maximum 23 mm long stent.

Along with secondary clinical endpoints such as major adverse cardiac events and revascularization rates, the extent of stent coverage and re-endothelialization, via optical coherence tomography (OCT), and endothelial function (vasomotor response) will be evaluated in a subgroup of patients at nine months.

“Drug-eluting stents have significantly improved and expanded our ability to treat coronary atherosclerotic lesions compared to bare-metal stents,” said William Wijns, M.D., Cardiovascular Center, Aalst, Belgium, and principal investigator of the study. “However, cardiologists are still looking for options to improve safety and outcomes. The MiStent DES may address some of these issues directly. Based on recent GLP animal data, the polymer and drug are gone from the stent within 45 to 60 days. This may reduce the risk of late-stent thrombosis related to long-term exposure to DES nonerodible polymers. Given the relatively short residence time of polymer on the stent, MiStent DES may allow for a shorter duration of dual antiplatelet therapy and be a safer choice for noncompliant patients. These performance-enhancing properties are what interventional cardiologists are looking for in a new drug-eluting stent.”

For more information: www.micell.com

http://www.dicardiology.com/article/first-patient-enrolled-dissolving-drug-polymer-coronary-stent-trial

 

Part III

Stent Flexibility versus Stent Concertina Effect

 

Stent flexibility versus concertina effect: mechanism of an unpleasant trade-off in stent design and its implications for stent selection in the cath-lab.

Foin N, Di Mario C, Francis DP, Davies JE.

Abstract

The “concertina effect”, longitudinal deformation of the proximal segments of a deployed stent when force is applied from a guide catheter or other equipment, is a recently recognised problem which seems to particularly affect more recent stent designs. Until now, flexibility and deliverability have been paramount aims in stent design. Developments have focused on optimizing these features which are commonly evaluated by clinicians and demanded by regulatory bodies. Contemporary stent designs now provide high flexibility by reducing the number of connecting links between stent segments and by allowing the connecting links to easily change their length. These design evolutions may, however, simultaneously reduce longitudinal strength and have the unintended effect of inducing some risk of longitudinal compression of the stent (the “concertina effect”) during difficult clinical cases. Progress in stent design and elimination of restenosis by drug coating has improved PCI outcome and enabled new applications. Here we discuss design trade-offs that shaped evolution and improvement in stent design, from early bare metal designs to the latest generation of drug eluting stent (DES) platforms. Longitudinal strength was not recognised as a critical parameter by clinicians or regulators until recently. Measurements, only now becoming publically available, seem to confirm vulnerability of some modern designs to longitudinal deformation. Clinicians could be more guarded in their assumption that changes in technology are beneficial in all clinical situations. Sometimes a silent trade-off may have taken place, adopting choices that are favourable for the vast majority of patients but exposing a few patients to unintended hazard.

Int J Cardiol. 2013 Apr 15;164(3):259-61. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2012.09.143. Epub 2012 Oct 22.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23084111

 

Stent “Concertina:” Stent Design Does Matter

On-Hing Kwok, MBBS

From the Cardiac Catheterization & Intervention Center, Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital, Happy Valley, Hong Kong.

ABSTRACT: The development of modern coronary stent platforms has transformed the landscape of interventional cardiology. Contemporary coronary stents are much more deliverable than older-generation stents. However, longitudinal deformation has emerged as a “new” complication in modern coronary stent platforms. Although most reported cases of longitudinal stent deformation involve mechanical or technical mishaps, it appears that it is more frequently associated with a particular stent design: the “offset peak-to-peak” stent design. This review summarizes the latest data around stent performance. Within this context, two clinical cases where longitudinal deformation was observed in the absence of any mechanical mishaps are also presented. Collectively, this evidence suggests that stent design may be a major determinant of stent performance.

SOURCE

Journal Cardiology, Volume 25 – Issue 6 – June 2013

Key words: longitudinal deformation, stent design, stent concertina, drug-eluting stent

Over the past decades, stent design and material has undergone significant evolution. The introduction of the drug-eluting stent (DES) has also made “drug delivery” another major determinant in modern stent design.1

Coronary stent design. The majority of early coronary stents were made of stainless steel. These designs were associated with variable basic manufacture, cell geometry, and strut thickness.2 Use of alloys such as cobalt chromium and platinum chromium has enabled stents to have thinner struts, while maintaining strength and radioopacity.3 Thin-strut stents improve deliverability and conformability. However, there is limited evidence suggesting that thinner struts may result in less vessel wall damage and hence less risk of restenosis.4-6 Although thin-strut DESs have never been shown to have lower restenosis rates than thick-strut DESs, the trend of thinner strut platforms has triggered innovative designs to maintain stent radial strength. The development of longer, thinner, more flexible, and easier-to-deliver stent platforms made percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) possible even in the most tortuous anatomy and calcified vessels.7 However, longitudinal stent strength may be compromised with these modern designs.3 Stent design requires careful consideration of several performance characteristics, including crimped and expanded stent flexibility, shortening upon expansion, trackability, scaffolding, radioopacity, longitudinal strength, radial strength, and recoil.8

Stent longitudinal flexibility and deliverability prior to deployment, and vessel conformability after deployment, are widely dependent on the number, orientation, shape, thickness, and material of the crests and links.9 These parameters also determine the longitudinal strength of the stent, defined as maintenance of intact stent architecture upon exposure to compressing or elongating forces.9 Alteration of any one feature of a stent platform will undoubtedly impact other aspects of stent performance and may result in clinical complications. For instance, thinner struts improve deliverability, but reduce radio-opacity of the cobalt chromium stents. In addition, reduction of the number of fixed links between cells or alteration of their geometry may enhance flexibility and conformability, but as a consequence may compromise longitudinal strength.7

Although stent flexibility may be influenced by a variety of factors, it has been shown that stent longitudinal integrity, defined by the number of links between hoops, correlates with stent stiffness. In addition, the alignment of the links with the long axis of the stent may also be an important factor for longitudinal integrity.9

Architectural design differences are major factors affecting resistance against longitudinal compression. The peak-to-peak or peak-to-valley strut architectures of platforms result in variation between the longitudinal stiffness and strength of stents. It is highly likely that the occurrence of longitudinal deformation is dependent on a particular stent design.10

Longitudinal stent deformation. Until recently, the longitudinal strength of coronary stents has never been considered a standard parameter of stent performance. However, recent evidence identified longitudinal compression, or postdeployment stent shortening, as a newly observed complication. Longitudinal stent deformation is defined as the distortion or shortening of a stent in the longitudinal axis following successful stent deployment.3 This phenomenon describes the effect of a longitudinal compression force on the stent rings, causing them to nest or concertinate.

PCI procedures involve multiple and complex techniques that may increase the risk for longitudinal stent compression. These include the use of extra-support guide catheters, aggressive guide catheter manipulation (deep-seat), mother and child catheter systems, multiple balloon postdilations, bifurcation stent techniques, and adjunctive devices such as intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), distal protection devices, etc.7 In a clinical setting, longitudinal compression may occur in various situations (Table 1),8 and it may simply represent an angiographic detection of an exceptional PCI complication. Protrusion of struts into the lumen and extensive malapposition of struts due to longitudinal deformation may result in disruption of flow and increasing the risk of stent thrombosis. Moreover, longitudinal deformation of a DES may result in uneven drug delivery and increase the risk for in-stent restenosis (ISR).9

Clinical reports of longitudinal deformation. Hanratty and Walsh recently described 3 cases where longitudinal compression of a previously deployed stent resulted in stent deformation. Two cases were detected angiographically, while 1 was detected on adjunctive imaging. The complication was first reported with the Promus Element (Boston Scientific) platform. However, Hanratty and Walsh noted that this phenomenon has since been observed with all modern DES platforms. They concluded that such deformation could potentially result in a suboptimal technical result for the medium- to long-term and increase the risk for stent thrombosis and ISR if left undetected.7

References

1. Htay T, Liu MW. Drug-eluting stent: a review and update. Vasc Health Risk Manag. 2005;1(4):263-276.

2. Colombo A, Stankovic G, Moses JW. Selection of coronary stents. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2002;40(6):1021-1033.

3. Williams PD, Mamas MM, Morgan K, et al. Longitudinal stent deformation — a retrospective analysis of frequency and mechanisms. EuroIntervention. 2012;8(2):267-274. Epub AOP 2011.

4. Pache J, Kastrati A, Mehilli J, et al. Intracoronary stenting and angiographic results: strut thickness effect on restenosis outcome (ISAR-STEREO-2) trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2003;41(8):1283-1288.

5. Moreno R, Jimenez-Valero S, Sanchez-Recalde A. Periprocedural (30-day) risk of myocardial infarction after drug-eluting coronary stent implantation: a meta-analysis comparing cobalt-chromium and stainless steel drug-eluting coronary stents. EuroIntervention. 2011;6(8):1003-1010.

6. Kastrati A, Mehilli J, Dirschinger J, et al. Strut thickness effect on restenosis outcome (ISAR-STEREO) trial. Circulation. 2001;103(23):2816-2821.

7. Hanratty CG, Walsh SJ. Longitudinal compression: a “new” complication with model coronary stent platforms — a time to think beyond deliverability. EuroIntervention. 2011;7(7):872-877. Epub AOP 2011.

8. Prabhu S, Schikorr T, Mahmoud T, Jacobs J, Potgieter A, Simonton C. Engineering assessment of the longitudinal compression behavior of contemporary coronary stents. EuroIntervention. 2012;8(2):275-281.

9. Ormiston JA, Webber B, Webster MWI. Stent longitudinal integrity — bench insights into a clinical problem. JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2011;4(12):1310-1317.

10. Mortier P, De Beule M. Stent design back in the picture: an engineering perspective on longitudinal stent compression. EuroIntervention. 2011;7(7):773-776.

11. Stone GW, Teirstein PS, Meredith IT, et al; PLATINUM Trial Investigators. A prospective randomised evaluation of a novel everolimus-eluting coronary stent: the PLATINUM trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2011;57(16):1700-1708.

12. Pitney M, Pitney K, Jepson N, et al. Major stent deformation/pseudofracture of 7 Crown Endeavor/Micro Driver stent platform: incidence and causative factors. EuroIntervention. 2011;7(2):256-262.

13. Finet G, Rioufol G. Coronary stent longitudinal deformation by compression: is this a new global stent failure, a specific failure of a particular stent design, or simply an angiographic detection of an exceptional complication. Eurointervention. 2012;8(2):177-181. Epub AOP 2011.

Disclosure: The author has completed and returned the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. The author reports no conflicts of interest regarding the content herein.

Manuscript submitted September 12, 2012, provisional acceptance given October 31, 2012, final version accepted January 14, 2013.

Address for correspondence: On-Hing Kwok, MBBS, FRCP, FACC, FSCAI, Cardiology Center, 6/F Li Shu Fan Building, Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital, 2 Village Road, Happy Valley, Hong Kong. Email:vohkwok@hksh.com

SOURCE

J INVASIVE CARDIOL 2013;25(6):E114-E119

 

Part IV

Stent Thrombosis Through the Generations of Stent Design

A recent retrospective analysis provided further valuable information on the frequency and mechanisms of longitudinal stent deformation. The study involved 4455 interventional cases performed during a 4-year period. Stent deformation occurred in a total of 9 cases (0.2%) and affected 0.097% of stents deployed. In 6 cases, the Promus Element stent was involved, and there was 1 case each involving Endeavor (Medtronic), Biomatrix (Biosensors Interventional Technologies), and Taxus Liberté (Boston Scientific) stents. Stent deformation varied from 0% in several stent types to 0.86% in the case of Promus Element.3 It was virtually unseen in the Cypher and Xience (Abbott Vascular) platforms. Longitudinal stent deformation is probably not a “class effect,” but highly dependent on a particular stent design.

http://www.invasivecardiology.com/articles/stent-“concertina”-stent-design-does-matter

Author(s): 

Lawrence Rajan, MD and David J. Moliterno, MD

From the Gill Heart Institute and Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.

Stent thrombosis (ST), while infrequent, remains a dreaded complication of percutaneous coronary revascularization because of the associated rates of

  • major myocardial infarction (60%-70%) and
  • early mortality (20%-25%).1

As coronary stents became more widely used in clinical practice during the late 1990s to treat acute vessel closure and to reduce restenosis, the emergence of ST redirected the efforts of the cardiology community to mitigate or eliminate this potentially catastrophic event. Advances in

  • stent design and strut thinness,
  • the advent of drug-eluting stent (DES) options, and
  • more potent antithrombotic therapy

have been substantial influences on ST.

  • DESs have been associated with higher ST rates as compared to their bare-metal counterparts, particularly when utilized among high-risk groups and high-risk lesions.

More recently, early meta-analyses of smaller studies have suggested

  • reduced ST rates with newer-generation DESs versus prior versions.2 Similarly, observations from a randomized trial suggested
  • lower ST rates with the newer-generation everolimus-eluting stent (<1%) compared to rates for the older-generation paclitaxel-eluting stent (3%).3

So while this uncommon but catastrophic complication persists in contemporary practice, its low frequency has made it difficult to study, particularly in the real-world setting.

In the current issue of the Journal of Invasive Cardiology, Dores et al have analyzed the outcome data from a large-volume, single-center prospective registry evaluating the incidence of definite ST.4 The study consisted of 3806 patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention between January 2003 and December 2010. In the registry, a total of 2388 patients (62.7%) were treated with first-generation DESs (sirolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting stents), while 1418 patients (37.3%) were treated with second-generation DESs (everolimus-eluting and zotarolimus-eluting stents). The overall occurrence of Academic Research Consortium (ARC)-defined definite ST at 12 months was 1.2% (46 events). After correction for baseline differences between study groups and other variables deemed to influence the occurrence of ST, Dores et al concluded that the

  • use of first-generation DESs was associated with a 2.4-fold increase in the risk of definite ST. Among the cases receiving a first-generation DES,
  • the risk of ST was higher for paclitaxel-eluting versus sirolimus-eluting stents.

The observations from Dores et al are consistent with prior reports, in that the rates of definite ST are low and decreasing in recent years. As can be seen in Dores’s Figure 3 considering annual frequency of definite ST, the numerically highest years were 2003 and 2004, and over the most recent years, rates have averaged closer to 1%. Questions will remain in the field of ST, some of which will require large-scale registry data to help consider their relevance and possible answers.

The underlying challenge remains how to afford to study such low-frequency events with multifactorial and variable etiologies. Beyond the events during the interventional procedure and device utilized (ie, type of DES), many other factors that affect the rate of ST (eg, patient genotype and phenotype) are still being unraveled. Considerable research has gone into finding predictive subsets for those at increased risk for ST.5 Among identified factors are the timing and acuity of presentation. Patients presenting with an ACS are known to be more vulnerable to early ST than patients with chronic stable disease. The initial plaque rupture of ACS triggers a prothrombotic avalanche of events, from platelet activation to local thrombus formation and occlusion, spasm, and distal embolization of microcirculatory debris.6 It is interesting to note in the Dores et al. registry that patients receiving second-generation DESs more often presented with an ACS, making their observations reassuring that ST rates can be kept low with evolving care strategies.

In an analysis of the ACUITY trial, which particularly enrolled patients with ACS,7 early ST occurred with similar frequency after anticoagulation with either heparin plus glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors or bivalirudin (with or without IIb/IIIa inhibitors), and not surprisingly was predicted by diffuse atherosclerosis, suboptimal angiographic results, and inadequate pharmacotherapy. Such patients also had a higher incidence of renal insufficiency and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The ACUITY subanalysis found that the rate of ST within 30 days was 1.4%, significantly higher than the 0.3%-0.5% ST rates reported among patients with stable coronary artery disease.

Among the most critical factors in mitigating the risk of ST are adequate and consistent dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT). A remarkable interpatient variability in the antiplatelet response to clopidogrel has been well documented. The frequency of

  • clopidogrel hyporesponsiveness has been reported among as many as 30% of patients undergoing PCI, yet the clinical relevance of antiplatelet responsivity is modest,8 again since the factors related to ST are many.
  • Loss-of-function alleles have been identified for clopidogrel metabolism, and these have been associated with an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events, including ST.
  • Among patients with ACS, the need for more rapid and potent pharmacological suppression of platelet reactivity in the prevention of early ST is highlighted in clinical trials testing newer antiplatelet therapies.

In a landmark trial,

  • prasugrel, a more potent, consistent, and faster-acting third-generation thienopyridine has shown a significant reduction in overall ST rates compared to clopidogrel (1.1% vs 2.4%).9 Similarly,
  • ticagrelor, an oral, reversible, direct-acting inhibitor of the ADP receptor P2Y12 that has a more rapid onset and greater potency of platelet inhibition than clopidogrel was recently studied in a large clinical trial.
  • In the Platelet Inhibition and Patient Outcomes (PLATO) study, there was a significant reduction in ST in the ticagrelor group vs the clopidogrel group, with definite ST rates of 1.3% and 1.9%, respectively.10

It is becoming clear that there has been a generational improvement in DESs that has reduced the risk of ST. This has been paralleled by advances in DAPT regimens and interventional techniques that have collectively reduced the risk of ST. While the field will continue to search for answers to the

  • optimum duration of DAPT, and whether this is dependent on
  • stent type and
  • acuity of patient presentation,

DES polymers, design characteristics, and the antiproliferative drugs will also continue to evolve. Understanding incremental improvements in techniques, devices, and drugs will remain quite challenging as the rate of ST slowly moves closer to zero.

References

1. Cutlip DE, Baim DS, Ho KK, et al. Stent thrombosis in the modern era: a pooled analysis of multicenter coronary stent clinical trials. Circulation. 2001;103(15):1967-1971.

2. Palmerini T, Biondi-Zoccai G, Della Riva D, et al. Stent thrombosis with drug-eluting and bare-metal stents: evidence from a comprehensive network meta-analysis. Lancet. 2012;379(9824):1393-1402.

3. Kedhi E, Joesoef KS, McFadden E, et al. Second-generation everolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting stents in real-life practice (COMPARE): a randomised trial. Lancet. 2010;375(9710):201-209.

4. Dores H, Raposo L, Teles RC, et al. Stent thrombosis with second versus first generation drug eluting stents in real world coronary percutaneous intervention. J Invasive Cardiol. 2013;25(7):330-336.

5. Holmes DR Jr, Kereiakes DJ, Garg S, et al. Stent thrombosis. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2010;56(17):1357-1365.

6. Finn AV, Nakano M, Narula J, Kolodgie FD, Virmani R. Concept of vulnerable/unstable plaque. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2010;30(7):1282-1292.

7. Aoki J, Lansky AJ, Mehran R, et al. Early stent thrombosis in patients with acute coronary syndromes treated with drug-eluting and bare metal stents: the Acute Catheterization and Urgent Intervention Triage Strategy trial. Circulation. 2009;119(5):687-698.

8. Holmes DR Jr, Dehmer GJ, Kaul S, Leifer D, O’Gara PT, Stein CM. ACCF/AHA clopidogrel clinical alert: approaches to the FDA “boxed warning.” A report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation Task Force on Clinical Expert Consensus Documents and the American Heart Association. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2010;56(4):321-341.

9. Wiviott SD, Braunwald E, McCabe CH, et al; TRITON-TIMI 38 Investigators. Intensive oral antiplatelet therapy for reduction of ischaemic events including stent thrombosis in patients with acute coronary syndromes treated with percutaneous coronary intervention and stenting in the TRITON-TIMI 38 trial: a subanalysis of a randomised trial. Lancet. 2008;371(9621):1353-1363.

10. Wallentin L, Becker RC, Budaj A, et al; the PLATO Investigators. Ticagrelor versus clopidogrel in patients with acute coronary syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(11):1045-1057.

Disclosure: The authors have completed and returned the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. The authors report no conflicts of interest regarding the content herein.

Address for correspondence: David J. Moliterno, MD, Department of Internal Medicine, The University of Kentucky, 900 S. Limestone Avenue, 329 Wethington Building, Lexington, KY 40536-0200. Email: moliterno@uky.edu

Journal of invasive Cardiology, Volume 25 – Issue 7 – July 2013

http://www.invasivecardiology.com/articles/stent-thrombosis-through-generations

Stent Thrombosis With Second- Versus First-Generation Drug-Eluting Stents in Real-World Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: Analysis of 3806 Consecutive Procedures From a Large-Volume Single-Center Prospective Registry

Stent thrombosis (ST) is a serious and often fatal event limiting the efficacy of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). The pathophysiology of ST is multifactorial, and underlying causes including stent-, procedure-, lesion-, and patient-related factors seem to play different roles at different time points after the index procedure.1,2 When compared to first-generation (1stGEN) drug-eluting stents (DESs), newer DESs have been associated with a lower rate of ST in several randomized clinical trials, subsequent meta-analyses, and also in some registries, such as the recently published Swedish Coronary Angiography and Angioplasty Registry (SCAAR).3-7 New, second-generation (2ndGEN) DESs have been developed with improved design and materials, both of which may contribute to overcome some of the limitations of the older DESs. Decreased strut thickness — resulting in higher flexibility, conformability, and deliverability — and optimized polymer biocompatibility and drug delivery kinetics have been shown to contribute to a low late-loss rate and to a lower thrombotic risk.1 Despite the evidence pointing in this direction, most of the data comes from post hoc analysis and meta-analysis, mainly because studies defining ST as a primary endpoint are scarce.

We aimed to assess whether or not the systematic use of a 2ndGEN DES, relative to the 1stGEN DES, translates into a higher safety rate in a real-world population where DES implantation was indicated. For that purpose, we conducted an analysis of a single-center prospective registry, evaluating the incidence of definite ST, as defined by the Academic Research Consortium (ARC), at 12 months of follow-up as the primary outcome measure.

Author(s): 

Helder Dores, MD, Luís Raposo, MD, Rui Campante Teles, MD, Carina Machado, MD, Sílvio Leal, MD, Pedro Araújo Gonçalves, MD, Henrique Mesquita Gabriel, MD, Manuel Sousa Almeida, MD, Miguel Mendes, MD

Abstract

Background and Aims. When compared to their first-generation (1stGEN) counterparts, second-generation (2ndGEN) drug-eluting stents (DESs) have been associated with better clinical outcomes in randomized clinical trials, namely by reducing the rates of stent thrombosis (ST). Our goal was to investigate whether or not the broad use of newer devices would translate into higher safety in a real-world population. For that purpose, we compared the occurrence of definite ST at 12 months between two patient subsets from a large-volume single-center registry, according to the type of DES used. Total mortality was a secondary endpoint.

Methods and Results. Between January 2003 and December 2010, a total of 3806 patients were submitted to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with only 1stGEN or 2ndGEN DES: 2388 patients (62.7%) were treated with 1stGEN DES only (sirolimus-eluting stent [SES] = 1295 [34.0%]; paclitaxel-eluting stent [PES] = 943 [24.8%]; both stent types were used in 150 patients) and 1418 patients (37.3%) were treated with 2ndGEN DESs only. The total incidence of definite ST (as defined by the Academic Research Consortium) at 12 months was 1.2% (n = 46). After correction for baseline differences between study groups and other variables deemed to influence the occurrence of ST, the use of 1stGEN DES was associated with a significant 2.4-fold increase in the risk of definite ST (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.05-5.42; P=.039) at 12 months; adjusted risk was higher with PES (hazard ratio [HR], 3.6; 95% CI, 1.48-8.70; P=.005) than with SES (HR, 2.3; 95% CI, 0.92-5.65; P=.074). Total mortality (3.7% vs 3.5%) did not differ significantly between groups (adjusted HR, 1.2; 95% CI, 0.81-1.84, P=.348).

Conclusions. Our data suggest that in the real-world setting of contemporary PCI, the unrestricted use of newer 2ndGEN DESs translates into an improvement in PCI safety (relative to 1stGEN DESs), with a significantly lower risk of definite ST at 12 months.

Journal of Invasive Cardiology                    Volume 25 – Issue 7 – July 2013

J INVASIVE CARDIOL 2013;25(7):330-336

Key words: stent thrombosis, drug-eluting stent

http://www.invasivecardiology.com/articles/stent-thrombosis-second-versus-first-generation-drug-eluting-stents-real-world-percutaneous

 

Part V

Stent Thrombosis in Randomized Trials of Drug-Eluting Stents:

Reappraisal of the Synthesis of Evidence!

Stent Thrombosis in Randomized Clinical Trials of Drug-Eluting Stents

Laura Mauri, M.D., Wen-hua Hsieh, Ph.D., Joseph M. Massaro, Ph.D., Kalon K.L. Ho, M.D., Ralph D’Agostino, Ph.D., and Donald E. Cutlip, M.D.

N Engl J Med 2007; 356:1020-1029February 12, 2007DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa067731

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa067731?goback=%2Egde_675087_member_263490750

 

EDITORIAL on  bare-metal stents (BMS) vs sirolimus-eluting stents (SES)

With full interest, we read the article “Stent thrombosis in randomized clinical trials (RCT) of drug-eluting stents (DES)” by Mauri L et al, previously published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2007 [1]. The authors concluded that “The incidence of stent thrombosis (ST) did not differ significantly between patients with DES and those with bare-metal stents (BMS) in RCT, although the power to detect small differences in rates was limited” [1]. 
I have the following concerns. First and foremost, ST in the BMS groups occurred more frequently among patients who underwent intervening target lesion revascularization (TLR) versus those who did not [1]. And since brachytherapy was the standard of care for treatment of restenosis at that time, it was used more frequently in patients with restenosis following BMS (9 out of 11 patients with BMS who underwent intervening TLR and subsequently developed definite/probable ST), in whom restenosis occurred more frequently and more diffusely, compared with DES [1]. In an observational study, brachytherapy was associated with a high risk of late (thrombotic) total occlusion of the index vessel at 6-month angiographic follow-up [2]. In that study, the mean time from brachytherapy to late total occlusion was 5.4 ± 3.2 months [2]. Therefore, brachytherapy may constitute selection bias for devices with higher rates of restenosis, by increasing the risk of late ST following intervening procedures for these devices. This might explain the much higher rate of late (beyond 30 days to 1 year) definite/probable ST following BMS compared with sirolimus-eluting stents (SES) (1% versus 0.1%, respectively), which was obviously responsible for the higher overall rate of definite/probable ST following BMS compared with SES at 4-year follow-up (1.7% versus 1.5%, respectively, p=0.7) [1]. It is worth mentioning that

  • BMS was associated with a lower rate of very late (beyond 1 year) definite/probable ST compared with SES (0.4% versus 0.9%, respectively) [1]. Second,
  • the study included 4 RCT of SES published from 2002 to 2004, and 4 RCT of paclitaxel-eluting stents (PES) published from 2003 to 2005, all of which were published before the Academic Research Consortium (ARC) report that put forward the current standard definitions of ST [3].

Thus, the ARC definitions were applied to all of these trials retrospectively, and therefore, might have missed some of the ST events.

  • Third, the study enrolled 878 patients with SES versus 870 treated with the corresponding BMS, 1400 patients with PES versus 1397 treated with the corresponding BMS; thus, it was clearly underpowered for detection of a difference in rare-by-nature events such as ST.  Forth, the
  • RCT included in the study were the earliest RCT of SES and PES; hence, they enrolled relatively low-risk patient, lesion, and clinical subsets, that do not reflect real-world practice.
  • Finally, the individual databases of RCT of PES were managed by Boston Scientific, which might introduce another source of bias!

References

1. Mauri L, Hsieh WH, Massaro JM, et al. Stent thrombosis in randomized clinical trials of drug-eluting stents. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1020-9.

2. Waksman R, Bhargava B, Mintz GS, et al. Late total occlusion after intracoronary brachytherapy for patients with in-stent restenosis. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2000;36:65-8.

3. Cutlip DE, Windecker S, Mehran R, et al. Clinical end points in coronary stent trials: a case for standardized definitions. Circulation 2007;115:2344-51.

Part VI

Duration of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy following Zotarolimus-Eluting Stents and A New Strategy for Discontinuation of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy

Dr. Pearlman: Drug eluting stents decrease in stent stenosis from endothelial exuberant growth at the cost of increased propensity to thrombosis, offset by prolonged use of dual anti platelet medication. The net effect depends on compliance which if good results in net decrease. The risk has increased due to drug eluting stent prevalence, but that is offset by management with dual anti platelet agents, so the net incidence is reduced. There have been a number of presentations based on angioscopy showing thrombus inside bare metal and drug eluting stents that supported the general concensus also supported by TIMI trials that stent thrombosis is promoted by metal stents until they endothelialize, and that drug-eluting stents impede the endothelialization “too well” prolonging that issue, so minimal dual platelet agent duration in practice is 3 months for BMS, 6-12 months for DES, but benefit fades to 2% at 1 year, 1% at 2 years at which point risk-benefit is unconvincing and many stop plavix, while some insist it is a lifetime medication.

With full interest, we read the article “Dual antiplatelet therapy duration and clinical outcomes following treatment with zotarolimus-eluting stents (ZES)” by Kandzari DE, et al [1]. The authors concluded that “Among patients treated with ZES, late-term events of death, myocardial infarction (MI), stroke, and stent thrombosis (ST) do not significantly differ between patients taking 6 months dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) compared with continuation beyond 1 year” [1].
I have the following concerns. First, although the authors claimed that their study was based on a pooled analysis of patients who received ZES in 5 ‘clinical trials’; actually, 2 out of 5 were not ‘trials’. One was a registry of direct stenting with ZES [2], and the other was a study of pharmacokinetics of ABT 578 in a subset of the ENDEAVOR II trial, that was not published in a medical journal [3]! Second, patients were classified by “DAPT adherence according to the most recent report of compliance with aspirin and thienopyridine”. Evidence supports that premature discontinuation clopidogrel is the most powerful independent predictor of late ST [4].

There is no evidence, however, that stopping aspirin predisposes to ST following drug-eluting stent implantation. Third, follow-up of DAPT adherence was done at 30 days, 6 months, then annually for 3 years. Reporting DAPT adherence based on “the last reported follow-up interval of compliance with both aspirin and clopidogrel” does not reflect the actual duration of clopidogrel received in any of the comparison groups. Forth, in the second comparison of “6 months on/24 months off” (on DAPT at 6 but not at 24 months) versus “≥24 months” (on DAPT at 6 and 24 months)”, the first group included, by definition, patients who were also on DAPT at 12 months (but not at 24 months). Thus, it cannot be taken to reflect a comparison between 6-month DAPT and 24-month DAPT!  Fifth, the ENDEAVOR II and ENDEAVOR III trials were published in 2006, before the publication of ARC report [5,6]. Therefore, the ARC definitions of ST were applied retrospectively in many patients, which might explain the absence of ‘probable’ ST in all comparison groups, in all time points. Sixth, major bleeding was defined exclusively as “any hemorrhagic event that required blood product transfusion”. This might explain why such rates were 0% in all groups, in all time points. Finally, the study involved low-risk patient and lesion subsets, and was statistically underpowered for rare events such as ST, cardiac death, or MI.

References

1. Kandzari DE, Barker CS, Leon MB, et al. Dual antiplatelet therapy duration and clinical outcomes following treatment with zotarolimus-eluting stents. JACC Cardiovasc Interv 2011;4:1119-28.
2. Schultheiss HP, Grube E, Kuck KH, et al. Endeavor II Continued Access Investigators. Safety of direct stenting with the Endeavor stent: results of the Endeavor II continued access registry. EuroIntervention 2007;3:76–81.
3. Pharmacokinetics of ABT-578 in patients from Endeavor stent: results from a subset of a double-blind, randomized, multicenter (ENDEAVOR-II) trial. In: The ENDEAVOR II Study 30-Day Pharmacokinetic Report. Abbot Park, IL: Abbott Laboratories, 2004.
4. Iakovou I, Schmidt T, Bonizzoni E, et al. Incidence, predictors, and outcome of thrombosis after successful implantation of drug-eluting stents. JAMA 2005;293:2126-30.
5. Fajadet J, Wijns W, Laarman GJ, et al. ENDEAVOR II Investigators. Randomized, double-blind, multicenter study of the Endeavor zotarolimus-eluting phosphorylcholine-encapsulated stent for treatment of native coronary artery lesions: clinical and angiographic results of the ENDEAVOR II trial. Circulation 2006;114:798–806.
6. Kandzari DE, Leon MB, Popma JJ, et al. ENDEAVOR III Investigators. Comparison of zotarolimus-eluting and sirolimus-eluting stents in patients with native coronary artery disease: a randomized controlled trial. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:2440–7.
SOURCE
interventions.onlinejacc.org <http://interventions.onlinejacc.org> interventions.onlinejacc.org <http://interventions.onlinejacc.org>

A New Strategy for Discontinuation of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy

With interest, we read the article “A New Strategy for Discontinuation of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy: REal Safety and Efficacy of 3-month dual antiplatelet Therapy following Endeavor zotarolimus-eluting stent implantation (RESET) Trial” by Kim B-K, et al [1]. The authors concluded that Endeavor zotarolimus-eluting stent (E-ZES) with 3-month dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) was noninferior to other drug-eluting stents (DES) with 12-month DAPT (standard therapy) with respect to the occurrence of the primary endpoint (a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (MI), stent thrombosis (ST), target vessel revascularization (TVR), or bleeding at 1 year) [1]. 
I have the following concerns. First, the study design was defective since the comparator group should have been composed of patients who received the same stent (E-ZES) and took DAPT for 12 months. Moreover, the comparator group was not homogeneous, since it was composed of patients who received sirolimus-eluting stents (SES, Cypher, 28.5%), everolimus-eluting stents (EES, Xience, 30%), and ZES with a biocompatible polymer (R-ZES, Resolute, 41.5%). This would further complicate the comparison since it dilutes the results of the comparator group by mixing first- (Cypher) with second-generation (Xience and Resolute) DES. Further confusion was added with the unjustified stratified randomization of the comparator group: patients with Diabetes mellitus (DM) and those with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) were assigned to R-ZES; those with short lesions to SES; those with long lesions to EES. Second, whereas the trial compared two regimens (short versus long) of DAPT following DES, the primary endpoint adopted by the authors included ischemia-driven TVR; an event completely unrelated to the safety or efficacy of a DAPT regimen. Third, the authors could not explain why the event rates were very low (cardiovascular death 0.2%, MI 0.2%, ARC definite/probable ST 0.2%) compared with previous reports of the E-ZES at a similar time point: ENDEAVOR II trial (total death 1.2%, MI 2.7%, ST 0.5% at 9 months); ENDEAVOR IV trial (cardiac death 0.5%, MI 1.6%, ARC definite/probable ST 0.9% at 12 months) [2,3]. Forth, unexpectedly, both TVR and ST rates in patients with DM who received E-ZES were lower than the rates for the whole E-ZES group! And in the ACS subgroup, patients who received the standard therapy (R-ZES) had rates of cardiovascular death 0%, MI 0%, and ST 0%, at 12 months! And surprisingly, in the subset of short lesions, despite the shorter duration of DAPT, bleeding rates were higher with E-ZES + 3-month DAPT versus standard therapy (0.6% versus 0%)! Fifth, based on the current low 12-month rates of primary composite endpoint (4.7%) compared with the figure used for statistical power calculation (10-11%), the trial was underpowered for the primary endpoint. Additionally, the non-inferiority margin of 4% was very wide for the 12-month rates of primary endpoint (4.7%). Finally, enrollment of 2117 patients in 26 centers over 20 months speaks of a low enrollment rate of 4.1 patients/center/month, that reflects an overt selection bias.

References 


1. Kim BK, Hong MK, Shin DH, et al. A new strategy for discontinuation of dual antiplatelet therapy: the RESET Trial (REal Safety and Efficacy of 3-month dual antiplatelet Therapy following Endeavor zotarolimus-eluting stent implantation). J Am Coll Cardiol 2012;60:1340-8.

2. Fajadet J, Wijns W, Laarman GJ, et al. Randomized, double-blind, multicenter study of the Endeavor zotarolimus-eluting phosphorylcholine-encapsulated stent for treatment of native coronary artery lesions: clinical and angiographic results of the ENDEAVOR II trial. Circulation 2006;114:798-806.

3. Leon MB, Mauri L, Popma JJ, et al. A randomized comparison of the ENDEAVOR zotarolimus-eluting stent versus the TAXUS paclitaxel-eluting stent in de novo native coronary lesions 12-month outcomes from the ENDEAVOR IV trial.

SOURCE

J Am Coll Cardiol 2010;55:543-54.

content.onlinejacc.org content.onlinejacc.org

http://digitalreprints.elsevier.com/i/85787/6

Conclusions

by Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

This has been a six part discussion on the progress of stent design, and the decreasing problem of stent thrombosis, which evades elimination with a tradeoff in greater utility and somewhat greater risk.  However, the risk of thrombotic events has become low enough that accurate comparisons of stent technologies, method of placement, and antithrombotic techniques to avoid thrombotic complications is burdened by statistical power limitations.  In addition to the issue of sample size, there is an issue of patient characteristics that probably confer increased risk.

In the first part we found that stent placement is done in 15-20% of cases at a bifurcation site, where it is most favorable for plaque buildup from turbulent flow and shear stress.  Recall that Routledge et al. (1) presented 2-year outcome data of 477 patients treated for bifurcation coronary disease with provisional side branch T-stenting using drug-eluting stents (DES), and they concluded that a systematic approach is feasible for 90% of the patients, with acceptable efficacy and safety profiles.  There are several inherent problems that encumbered any analysis.  These were: numerous anatomic configurations of bifurcation types, with the concern for late complications, restenosis, and its frequency, leading to the dilemma of placing two stents versus one stent, and then another as a side branch, if needed.  The study (1) did indicate that provisional stenting is feasible in 90% of all patients, and those who received a second stent in the side branch, 28%, had similar long-term outcomes as those treated with 1 stent. The outcome of this study is similar to that of the Nordic Bifurcation study, which observed no difference in outcomes at 6 months’ follow-up between 1 and 2 stents (9).  As for technique, the latest Nordic Bifurcation Stent Technique study, comparing the culotte and crush techniques, reported low rates of angiographic restenosis and major adverse cardiac events for both techniques (10). However, kissing balloon was shown to be critical in preventing restenosis. Provisional T-stenting offers several advantages compared with other bifurcation techniques. It seems to be the simplest and is associated with favorable long-term outcomes.  It has also been shown that side branches and osteal disease are most problematic and that dedicated devices will have a role in left main disease.

The next issue for consideration is the use of biodegradable drug-eluting stents versus durable polymer DES. Biodegradable polymer DES resulted in lower rates than durable polymer DES of

  • target lesion revascularization (hazard ratio [HR] 0.82, 95 percent confidence interval [CI] 0.68-0.98, P=0.029).
  • definite stent thrombosis (the study’s primary safety endpoint), (HR 0.56, 95 percent CI 0.35-0.90, P=0.015).
  • very late stent thrombosis (clots occurring more than one year after angioplasty) for the biodegradable polymer group (HR 0.22, 95 percent CI 0.08-0.61, P=0.004).
  • cardiac death and heart attack (HR 0.59, 95 percent CI 0.73-0.95, P=0.031).

The third topic for consideration is the tradeoff between stent flexibility versus the concertina effect. Longitudinal strength was not recognized as a critical parameter by clinicians or regulators until recently. Measurements, only now becoming publically available, seem to confirm vulnerability of some modern designs to longitudinal deformation. Stent designs now provide high flexibility by reducing the number of connecting links between stent segments and by allowing the connecting links to easily change their length.  However, this design results in reduced longitudinal strength with the unintended effect of inducing some risk of longitudinal compression of the stent (the “concertina effect”).  While contemporary coronary stents are much more deliverable than older-generation stents, longitudinal deformation has emerged as a “new” complication in modern coronary stent platforms. This is more frequently associated with a particular stent design: the “offset peak-to-peak” stent design.  Thin-strut stents improve deliverability and conformability. There is only limited evidence that thinner struts may result in less vessel wall damage reducing risk of restenosis. The trend of thinner strut platforms has triggered innovative designs to maintain stent radial strength. The development of longer, thinner, more flexible, and easier-to-deliver stent platforms made percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) possible even in the most tortuous anatomy and calcified vessels.  Longitudinal stent deformation, the distortion or shortening of a stent in the longitudinal axis is the effect of a longitudinal compression force on the stent rings, causing them to nest or concertinate.

The fourth question is the effect of stent design on stent thrombosis.  A recent retrospective analysis provided further valuable information on the frequency and mechanisms of longitudinal stent deformation. The study involved 4455 interventional cases performed during a 4-year period. Stent deformation occurred in a total of 9 cases (0.2%) and affected 0.097% of stents deployed.   Longitudinal stent deformation is probably not a “class effect,” but highly dependent on a particular stent design.

Stent thrombosis (ST), while infrequent, remains a dreaded complication of percutaneous coronary revascularization because of the associated rates of

  • major myocardial infarction (60%-70%) and
  • early mortality (20%-25%).1

the emergence of ST redirected the efforts of the cardiology community to mitigate or eliminate this potentially catastrophic event by

  • stent design and strut thinness,
  • the advent of drug-eluting stent (DES) options, and
  • more potent antithrombotic therapy

DESs have been associated with higher ST rates as compared to their bare-metal counterparts, particularly when utilized among high-risk groups and high-risk lesions.

The overall occurrence of Academic Research Consortium (ARC)-defined definite ST at 12 months was 1.2% (46 events). After correction for baseline differences between study groups and other variables deemed to influence the occurrence of ST, Dores et al concluded that the

  • use of first-generation DESs was associated with a 2.4-fold increase in the risk of definite ST. Among the cases receiving a first-generation DES,
  • the risk of ST was higher for paclitaxel-eluting versus sirolimus-eluting stents.

It should not be a surprise that patients presenting with an ACS are known to be more vulnerable to early ST than patients with chronic stable disease. The initial plaque rupture of ACS triggers a prothrombotic avalanche of events, from platelet activation to local thrombus formation and occlusion, spasm, and distal embolization of microcirculatory debris.6 It is interesting to note in the Dores et al. registry that patients receiving second-generation DESs more often presented with an ACS, making their observations reassuring that ST rates can be kept low.   Patients who had early ST were characterized by diffuse atherosclerosis, angiography, inadequate pharmacotherapy, and had a higher incidence of renal insufficiency and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.  The ACUITY subanalysis found that the rate of ST within 30 days was 1.4%, significantly higher than the 0.3%-0.5% ST rates reported among patients with stable coronary artery disease.

Among the most critical factors in mitigating the risk of ST are adequate and consistent dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT).  Among patients with ACS, the need for more rapid and potent pharmacological suppression of platelet reactivity in the prevention of early ST is highlighted in clinical trials testing newer antiplatelet therapies.  In the Platelet Inhibition and Patient Outcomes (PLATO) study, there was a significant reduction in ST in the ticagrelor group vs the clopidogrel group, with definite ST rates of 1.3% and 1.9%, respectively.

This brings us to ST in randomized trials of DES.  There was a much higher rate of late (beyond 30 days to 1 year) definite/probable ST following BMS compared with sirolimus-eluting stents (SES) (1% versus 0.1%, respectively).  BMS was associated with a lower rate of very late (beyond 1 year) definite/probable ST compared with SES (0.4% versus 0.9%, respectively) [1].  The different overall rate of definite/ probable ST following BMS compared with SES is nearly equal at 4-year follow-up (1.7% versus 1.5%, respectively), is indeterminate (p=0.7) [1]. The study was underpowered for detection of a difference in rare-by-nature events such as ST.

Finally, Dr. Pearlman analyzes the published studies concerning whether there should be a reduction in the length of dual antiplatelet therapy to six months.  Drug eluting stents decrease in stent stenosis from endothelial exuberant growth at the cost of increased propensity to thrombosis, offset by prolonged use of dual anti-platelet medication.  The risk has increased due to drug eluting stent prevalence, but that is offset by management with dual anti platelet agents, so the net incidence is reduced. Stent thrombosis is promoted by metal stents until they endothelialize, but drug-eluting stents impede the endothelialization, so minimal dual platelet agent duration in practice is 3 months for BMS, 6-12 months for DES, but benefit fades to 2% at 1 year, 1% at 2 years at which point risk-benefit is unconvincing.  Evidence supports that premature discontinuation clopidogrel is the most powerful independent predictor of late ST.

So here we have the status in a nutshell.

  • ST has driven the design of stents to be simpler to insert effectively, with a clear goal to minimize ST
  • The stent designs have resulted in thinner, and multi-segmented longer insertions as needed.
  • The result of improved stent design has been an effect of local vessel distortion.
  • The standard of practice is provisional T-branch DES
  • The use of dual antiplatelet therapy for not less than 1 year is determined by the time required for endothelialization of the artery.
  • There is a risk difference incurred by ACS versus stable disease, and by adequacy of antithrombotic therapy prior to an acute event.

Other related articles published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, include the following:

AHA, ACC Change in requirement for surgical support:  Class IIb -> Class IIa Level of Evidence A: Supports Nonemergent PCI without Surgical Backup (Change of class IIb, level of Evidence B).

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Justin D Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC

Survivals Comparison of Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) and Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) / Coronary Angioplasty

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Coronary Reperfusion Therapies: CABG vs PCI – Mayo Clinic preprocedure Risk Score (MCRS) for Prediction of5. in-Hospital Mortality after CABG or PCI

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP  and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Coronary Artery Disease – Medical Devices Solutions: From First-In-Man Stent Implantation, via Medical Ethical Dilemmas to Drug Eluting Stents

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Absorb™ Bioresorbable Vascular Scaffold: An International Launch by Abbott Laboratories

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

CABG or PCI: Patients with Diabetes – CABG Rein Supreme

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

New Drug-Eluting Stent Works Well in STEMI

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Revascularization: PCI, Prior History of PCI vs CABG

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT’s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP and  Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Outcomes in High Cardiovascular Risk Patients: Prasugrel (Effient) vs. Clopidogrel (Plavix); Aliskiren (Tekturna) added to ACE or added to ARB

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Read Full Post »

3D Cardiovascular Theater – Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite, Hybrid Surgery, Complications Post PCI and Repeat Sternotomy

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Article ID #70: Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Curation and Co-Curation. Published on 7/19/2013

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

This article has THREE Parts: 

Part One:  Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite for Hybrid Surgery

Part Two: Cardiac Surgery 

Part Three: Invasive Interventions with Complications

1. Repeat Sternotomy Post CABG and/or Aortic Valve Replacement

2. Complications Post PCI – Pump Catheter in Use

The voice of Series A Content Consultant, Justin D Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC

The leading cause of death and disability from any cause is cardiovascular disease, principally, heart attacks and strokes. Both the heart and brain typically allow only 10 minutes or so of inadequate blood supply before starting a committed course of permanent tissue injury, progressing in severity as time goes by without successful interruption of the disease process. Thus there is great time urgency to get patients to a definitive treatment that can stop the injury and restore adequate nutrient blood supply. Many patients can benefit from a catheterization to identify blockages and insert a small balloon within the blockage to expand the narrow channel, often followed by placement of a stent (wire cage) to maintain the expanded vessel diameter. Chemicals released over time from drug-eluting stents can prevent tissue in growth that may obstruct stents. These emergeny interventions are not always successful. There may be complications from the attempt to access an entry artery, and the blockages may not be amenable to a balloon. When such limitations are encountered, the next chance to help is surgical, with continued time pressure.

The fastest way to make the transition from a diagnostic catheterization to a timely intervention is a hybrid intervention suite that offers non-invasive imaging, catheterization and surgery all in one location. The following articles present the current state of hybrid “do it all” intervention suites. Additional articles address the risks of bad outcomes from such interventions.

Part One 

Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite for Hybrid Surgery

In ACC.10 and i2 Summit, 59th Annual Scientific Session, 3/14-3/16, 2010, Alfred A. Bove, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.C.C., ACC President addressed the conference attendees:

Welcome to the all-new Hybrid Cath Lab/OR and 3D CV Theater. Recent developments in cardiac surgery and interventional cardiology have led to the creation of integrated, hybrid cath lab/operating rooms (OR), which provide significant advantages in the diagnosis and treatment of patients requiring cardiac procedures—helping to facilitate a rapid-response approach. These multimodality rooms are designed to support a variety of integrated surgical and endovascular procedures. We are excited to provide you with this opportunity to get a first-hand look—and feel—of the latest technologies. We hope you take the time to explore this interactive, multivendor venue. Learning is at the core of the ACC Annual Scientific Session and we invite you to expand your educational experience in this dynamic learning environment.

In the Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite, you’ll discover how integrating cutting edge angiographic and surgical equipment and technologies can facilitate a broad range of procedures within one location. Additionally, you will learn how hybrid suites are providing solutions that enable interventionalists and surgeons to work collaboratively to provide the best treatment options for patients. The adjoining 3D CV Theater features presentations by physicians currently performing intravascular and surgical procedures in hybrid suites. Each live presentation pairs a cardiologist with a surgeon, allowing you to hear perspectives from both sides on a variety of hybrid suite procedures and cases. In addition, the Theater offers video presentations of cases from around the world.

The ACC thanks the supporters of the Hybrid Suite for providing us with the opportunity to share this unique learning destination with you.

http://www.expo.acc.org/acc12/CUSTOM/images/ACC12/ACC.10%20Hybrid%20Suite%20Directory.pdf

Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite for Hybrid Surgery

Procedures Performed in a Hybrid Suite

The treatment of cardiovascular diseases has undergone a paradigm shift within the last few years, from

  • open surgery to minimally invasive surgical procedures and from
  • limited percutaneous catheter-based interventions to hybrid interventions for the entire cardiovascular tree.

The Hybrid Suite

are perfect examples of procedures that could, and should, be carried out in a hybrid OR. High-risk patients who require less invasive interventions are the best candidates for treatment in a hybrid suite.

As cardiac surgery becomes less invasive, incisions are becoming smaller and smaller, and even totally endoscopic heart surgery is now possible. Cardiac surgeons have started to perform procedures that include catheter-based skills, such as transapical valve replacement. For these operations, surgeons need more sophisticated imaging techniques, fluoroscopy and contrast injections. The hybrid OR offers all these facilities. Perhaps the most obvious and easiest procedure that can be performed in a hybrid OR is coronary revascularization combining coronary artery bypass grafting with on-table intra-operative completion angiography for quality control. If the surgeon detects a problem during the procedure, he or she can revise the graft immediately and thereby prevent potential perioperative and long-term complications. Currently, cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons have shown special interest in so-called hybrid coronary interventions, which are combinations of minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting and percutaneous coronary interventions. In these procedures, cardiovascular surgeons place a left-internal mammary artery bypass graft to the left-anterior descending artery through small incisions (MIDCAB) or completely endoscopically (TECAB), while any remaining obstructed coronary arteries are treated with stents by an interventional cardiologist. This procedure is an attractive alternative to multivessel open coronary artery bypass grafting. Transcatheter heart-valve replacement and repair are especially suited to a hybrid suite because percutaneous transfemoral and transapical aortic valve repairs include risks that can only be treated successfully by immediate surgical intervention, such as coronary artery obstruction, aortic dissection and aortic perforations.

In addition, endovascular aortic stent grafting for the repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms is a suitable procedure for a hybrid operating room. Endovascular aneurysm repair has become an established alternative to open repair and is increasingly used for thoracic aorta repair as well. Some

  • emergency procedures for traumatic lesions of the thoracic aorta and
  • fulminant pulmonary embolism may also be performed in a hybrid OR. Several
  • pediatric interventions can be carried out in a hybrid suite as well, such as implantation of closure devices for atrial and ventricular septal defects in small children and
  • treatments for hypoplastic left-heart syndrome.

http://www.expo.acc.org/acc12/CUSTOM/images/ACC12/ACC.10%20Hybrid%20Suite%20Directory.pdf

In a recent article we reported on the Change in Requirement for Surgical Support by Cath Labs for performance of Nonemergent PCI without Surgical Backup, that increases the autonomy of Interventional Cardiologists. In the Hybrid OR that change is irrelevant since the presence of a Cardiac Surgeon is a fact of the division of labor between the two types of specialties. Cardiac Surgeons are involved with  percutaneous transfemoral and transapical aortic valve repairs and intervention for endoscopic aorta, AAA and Thoracic AA grafting.

AHA, ACC Change in Requirement for Surgical Support:  Class IIb -> Class III, Level of Evidence A: Supports Nonemergent PCI without Surgical Backup (Change of class IIb, level of Evidence B).

What is a Cardiovascular Hybrid Suite?

Cardiovascular hybrid suite is a state-of-the-art operating room equipped with a fully functional catheterization laboratory, thus allowing surgical procedures and catheter-based interventions to be carried out in the same room. Hybrid suites provide a place where treatments traditionally available only in a cath lab and procedures only available in an operating room can be performed together to provide patients with the best available combination of therapies for cardiovascular disease. These multidisciplinary, integrated cardiovascular procedural suites bring the best of two worlds together by combining all the advantages of a modern cath lab with an up-to-date cardiovascular surgery operating room (OR).

Hybrid suites began to evolve in the mid to late 1990s, when some groups of interventional cardiologists started sharing operating rooms with cardiovascular surgeons. The appeal of the hybrid suite concept has grown as have catheter based devices (stents, coils, balloons and lasers) have been developed that enable interventional cardiologists to advance the invasiveness and effectiveness and applications of percutaneous transcatheter interventions. The interest in these suites has also increased as cardiovascular surgeons have developed a variety of techniques for

  • Minimally invasive procedures, such as minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass grafting (MIDCAB) or
  • Totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass grafting (TECAB).

With the advent of more tools, interventional cardiologists are becoming more like surgeons, and with less invasive tools, cardiovascular surgeons are becoming more like interventionalists. Rather than separating surgical procedures from interventional procedures performed in traditional operating rooms and cath labs, hybrid suites provide a high-tech environment that allows cardiologists and surgeons to work together to offer patients complex, minimally invasive therapies.

Some experts believe that hybrid suites represent the wave of the future in cardiovascular care and that most heart centers will eventually install hybrid suites to offer patients the latest cardiovascular procedures safely and effectively with minimal surgical trauma. The rooms can be costly to build and equip, but if a medical center is considering building a new operating room or cath lab, setting up a hybrid suite makes sense. Medical centers that have a hybrid suite available can clearly differentiate themselves in a positive way from centers that do not have such capabilities.

The Benefits of a Hybrid Suite for Medical Centers

While building a hybrid suite is more expensive than building a traditional operating room or cath lab, a hybrid suite can potentially be used for all types of cardiovascular procedures, including

  • traditional cardiac and vascular surgery,
  • interventional coronary procedures,
  • endovascular aortic procedures and
  • electrophysiology procedures.

Hybrid suites reinforce the trend in cardiovascular care toward less invasive, comprehensive hybrid procedures. Once a hybrid suite is in place, the demand for its use will likely grow due to increasing indications and referrals for these innovative treatments, many of which are increasingly covered by third-party payers.

http://www.expo.acc.org/acc12/CUSTOM/images/ACC12/ACC.10%20Hybrid%20Suite%20Directory.pdf

What Equipment is Needed?

Interventional cath labs usually have excellent imaging capabilities but lack the sterile facilities and staff needed for a formal OR, while operating rooms frequently lack high-level imaging equipment. Some of the essential equipment for a hybrid suite includes:

• A state-of-the-art imaging system capable of performing 3D rotational angiography, CT scanning, and ultrasound is advantageous. Floor-mounted and ceiling-mounted systems are available, but many hospitals use ceiling-mounted systems because access to the patient is slightly easier. Some ceiling-mounted systems provide 3D imaging from the surgeon’s position perpendicular to the patient. However, some hospitals prefer floor-mounted systems because having mechanical parts running above the operative field may cause dust to fall, resulting in infections. An important aspect is that the C-arm can be parked away when it is not used. This especially enhances access of the anesthesia team to the patient.

• An operating table that meets the needs of both surgeons and interventionalists by electronically integrating the table with the imaging system is also essential. These tables should have retractable rails for retractors and other surgical tools. To perform 3D imaging on the operating table, the C-arm of the imaging system should allow fast and precise rotation around the patient.

• A variety of other surgical and interventional systems and equipment may also be needed, including a robotic surgical system, a heart-lung machine, an image integration system, an endoscopic imaging system, a radiology display system, an audiovisual system to move images to different monitors and an anesthesia monitoring system, including transesophageal echocardiography. Some equipment like the integrated OR table and the angiography unit need to be fixed parts of the hybrid OR. Some equipment will be mobile in order to maintain some flexibility in workflow.

Hybrid1

Hybrid2

Hybrid3

Hybrid4

Hybrid5

Who are the Equipment Vendors?

Philips Healthcare

Phone: 800-934-7372

Email: healthcare@philips.com

Web: http://www.philips.com/healthcare

Philips is one of the world’s leading technology companies, with a long history of practical innovation and visionary design. In healthcare, we are committed to understanding the human and technological needs of patients and caregivers. We believe this understanding will help us deliver solutions that not only enable more confident diagnoses and more efficient delivery of care, but also improve the overall experience of care. We offer equipment, software and services for imaging, patient monitoring, resuscitation and much more.  A Hybrid OR can help make life simpler for the interdisciplinary teams who operate in this environment every day. As a world leader in cardiovascular X-ray, Philips has the experience and expertise to deliver the first class technology you need to perform minimally invasive procedures with speed, accuracy and confidence. A long history of innovation has enabled Philips to develop pioneering imaging solutions that really make a difference.

For example, Philips Allura Xper cardiovascular X-ray systems are designed to deliver enhanced imaging with superb performance for all cardiac projections, and our iE33 ultrasound system with Live 3D TEE and QLAB can assist interventional procedures and provide comprehensive quantitative information to support critical decisions. Our cardiology informatics solutions help you manage patient information throughout the cardiovascular care continuum. Philips solutions allow minimally invasive and catheter-based procedures to take place in the same suite as conventional cardiac surgery.

Phillips EchoNavigator – X-Ray and 3-D Ultrasound is described in:

Minimally Invasive Structural CVD Repairs: FDA grants 510(k) Clearance to Philips’ EchoNavigator – X-ray and 3-D Ultrasound Image Fused.

Intuitive Surgical, Inc. 

da Vinci.Surgery by Intuitive Surgical, Inc. 

Phone: 800-876-1310

Email: info@intusurg.com

Web: http://www.intuitivesurgical.com

Intuitive Surgical, Inc. is the global technology leader in robotic-assisted, minimally invasive surgery. The company’s da Vinci® Surgical System offers breakthrough capabilities that enable cardiac surgeons to use a minimally invasive approach and avoid median sternotomy.

Content of FDA Warning Letter, following  FDA Inspection on dates 04/01/2013 – 05/30/2013 – it discussed in

Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite’s da Vinci Surgical Robot of Intuitive Surgical gets FDA Warning Letter on Robot Track Record

 

MAVIG GmbH 

Phone: 631-266-2229,

585-247-1212 ext. 60

Email: info@mavig.com

Web: http://www.mavig.com

MAVIG’s specialty is ceiling/boom suspension systems for lighting (exam, surgical and LED), monitor-suspension systems—single, multibank (one to eight) systems and widescreen, overhead radiation shielding and contrast injector adapters. MAVIG also manufactures radiation protection products such as aprons, gloves, table-attachable lower body shields, adjustable- and fixed-height mobile and modular barriers.

Toshiba America Medical Systems, Inc.

Phone: 714-730-5000

Email: mktgcomm@tams.com

Web: http://www.medical.toshiba.com

Creating a hybrid lab may be complicated, but having an experienced partner that listens makes all the difference. Toshiba’s unique blend of hybrid experience and industry recognized Infinix™-i imaging systems for the Cath Lab.

Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite in Leading Hospitals in the US

  • The  Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite at New York Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY is presented in

Becoming a Cardiothoracic Surgeon: An Emerging Profile in the Surgery Theater and through Scientific Publications

  • The  Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite at Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio is presented in

Heart Transplant (HT) Indication for Heart Failure (HF): Procedure Outcomes and Research on HF, HT @ Two Nation’s Leading HF & HT Centers

Speakers at 3D CV Theater, 2010 are working in Hospitals where Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite are in operations at the present time. The list include the following Hospitals with a Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite:

  • Vanderbilt Medical Center, Nashville, TN
  • University of Maryland Heart Center, Baltimore, MD
  • The Heart Center at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, Ohio
  • The Robotic Surgical Center, East Carolina University Department of Surgery, Greenville, N.C.
  • University of Washington Medicine Regional Heart Center, Seattle, WA
  • Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA
  • Saint Joseph’s Hospital and Peachtree Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Atlanta, GA
  • Emory University Hospital, Atlanta, GA
  • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA
  • Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA
  • Mayo Graduate School of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN
  • Lankenau Hospital, Lancaster, PA
  • Cardiac Non-Invasive Laboratory at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA
  • Robotic Surgery at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Atlanta, GA

Speakers at 3D CV Theater, 2010, included the following Cardiovascular Interventionists leading the adoption process of Hybrid Surgery in Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite into care modalities for cardiovascular disease:

Johannes O. Bonatti, M.D., is professor of surgery and director of coronary surgery and advanced coronary interventions at the University of Maryland Heart Center, Baltimore. He received his training in general surgery and cardiac surgery at the department of surgery at Innsbruck Medical University in Austria. Prior to his arrival at the University of Maryland, he worked at this institution as an attending surgeon and associate professor. Dr. Bonatti’s main interest is the development of minimally invasive, totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass grafting (TECAB) procedures using robotic technology.

As one of the international leaders in this field, he performed the largest series of robotic TECAB on the arrested heart, including single-, double- and triple-vessel TECAB. He has published significantly on procedure development and the implementation process of completely endoscopic coronary surgery using the da Vinci robotic system. Together with colleagues from interventional cardiology, Dr. Bonatti is working on integrated concepts for treatment of coronary artery disease. He was the first to perform a simultaneous hybrid coronary intervention using TECAB and placement of a coronary stent. He is organizing international meetings on hybrid interventions in cardiovascular medicine (http://www.icrworkshop.com). He has trained heart surgeons from around the world in the use of the da Vinci robot for heart surgery and he has introduced TECAB procedures in Austria, the Czech Republic, Greece, Turkey, India and Australia.

John G. Byrne, M.D., is the William S. Stoney Professor of Cardiac Surgery at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and chair of the department of cardiac surgery at Vanderbilt Medical Center, Nashville, TN.

Before moving to Vanderbilt, he was associate chief and residency program director in the division of cardiac surgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and associate professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA. A graduate of the University of California, Davis, he received his medical degree in 1987 from Boston University. His postdoctoral training was completed at the University of Illinois affiliated hospitals and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Dr. Byrne is the author of more than 100 scientific articles on cardiac surgery and related areas. His patient care emphasis is

  • aortic root surgery,
  • coronary artery disease and
  • valve surgery

He is board-certified in general surgery and thoracic surgery.

John P. Cheatham, M.D., is director of cardiac catheterization and interventional therapy and codirector of The Heart Center at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, Ohio. He is also the George H. Dunlap Endowed Chair in Interventional Cardiology and professor of pediatrics and internal medicine at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. Dr. Cheatham’s area of expertise is transcatheter intervention and hybrid therapy of newborns, children and adults with complex congenital heart disease. He has pioneered several new techniques and devices in non-surgical intervention and is a leader in developing hybrid therapies. He has been a principal investigator in numerous FDA-sponsored clinical trials evaluating non-surgical closure devices and stent therapy over the past two decades. Additionally, Dr. Cheatham designed the first hybrid cardiac catheterization suites and advanced imaging equipment at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. He serves as a consultant to various medical companies and proctors new transcatheter techniques and devices to other physicians around the world. Dr. Cheatham has implemented a formal physician exchange program with two of the leading medical institutions in China. In cooperation with China Red Cross, he is also the foreign director of the International Training Center for treatment of congenital heart disease in poor children. Dr. Cheatham has written more than 120 manuscripts, 16 book chapters, 300 national and international presentations and is co-editor of the book, Complications in Percutaneous Interventions for Congenital and Structural Heart Disease. After graduating from the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine, he completed his residency at Boston Children’s Hospital, followed by a fellowship in Pediatric Cardiology at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.

W. Randolph Chitwood, Jr., M.D., is senior associate vice chancellor for health sciences and chief of cardiovascular services at East Carolina University Department of Surgery, Greenville, N.C. Dr. Chitwood is a leading international pioneer in minimally invasive and robotic heart surgery. The Robotic Surgical Center at East Carolina University has trained more than 350 surgeons. His research activities relate to myocardial preservation, simulation in surgery and endoscopic/robotic cardiac surgery. He was the principal investigator of the FDA robotic mitral valve trials that led to approval for use in the U.S. He is the son and grandson of “southwestern Virginia mountain doctors” who set the guidelines for his professional life. He graduated from Hampden-Sydney College and received his medical degree from the University of Virginia. After medical school, he completed the surgical residency at Duke University Medical Center under David C. Sabiston, M.D., an influential surgical educator of the era. At Duke he spent 10 years training in general and cardiothoracic surgery, as well as basic science research.

After his chief residency at Duke in 1984, he was selected to begin and head the new cardiac surgery program at the East Carolina University School of Medicine. Because of his prolific publication record as a resident and clinical acumen, his initial appointment was as a full professor of surgery. Except for a two-year hiatus as the chief of cardiothoracic surgery at the University of Kentucky, he has spent his entire career at East Carolina University, where he also served as chairman of the department of surgery. In 2003, he was named to be in charge of the development of the East Carolina Heart Institute, which now includes an integrated department of cardiovascular sciences as well as a $200 million heart hospital, outpatient, research and education center.

Larry S. Dean, M.D., is director of the University of Washington Medicine Regional Heart Center and is professor of medicine and of surgery at the University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle. In addition to general cardiology, he is an expert in cardiac catheterization and interventional cardiology. He also conducts research on stents to keep blocked heart arteries open and on ways to prevent restenosis after stents are inserted. He is currently involved in the evaluation of percutaneous aortic valve replacement. Dr. Dean earned his M.D. from the University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, and served his internship and residency at the University of Washington. He then returned to the University of Alabama Hospital for fellowships in cardiovascular disease and in angioplasty. After nearly 15 years as a faculty member at the University of Alabama, he returned to the University of Washington to direct the Regional Heart Center. He is a fellow of the American College of Cardiology and is board-certified in internal medicine, cardiovascular disease and interventional cardiology. He is also a fellow of the American Heart Association and president-elect of the Society of Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions.

Andrew Craig Eisenhauer, M.D., is director of the interventional cardiovascular medicine service at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. His specialties are

  • interventional cardiology,
  • vascular medicine and
  • congenital and inherited diseases.

He earned his medical degree at New York University School of Medicine and served a residency at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital and a fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital. He is certified in internal medicine, cardiovascular disease and interventional cardiology. His clinical interests are

  • endovascular therapy,
  • complex coronary disease,
  • peripheral vascular disease,
  • cerebrovascular disease,
  • congenital heart disease and structural heart disease

Douglas A. Murphy, M.D., is chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Saint Joseph’s Hospital and a cardiothoracic surgeon at Peachtree Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Atlanta. His areas of interest are robotically assisted heart surgery with an emphasis on repairing the mitral valve rather than replacing it. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, Philadelphia, he served an internship and residency at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and at Emory University, Atlanta.

Khusrow Niazi, M.D., is an assistant professor at Emory University School of Medicine and director of peripheral and carotid intervention at Emory University Hospital Midtown, Atlanta. He earned his medical degree at King Edward Medical College, Lahore, Pakistan, and served an internship at Kettering Medical Center, Dayton, Ohio, and a fellowship at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, MI. He has published papers on stenting following rotational atherectomy, small vessel stenting for coronary arteries, imaging of lower extremities and treatment of peripheral arterial disease.

Jeffrey J. Popma, M.D., is director of innovations in interventional cardiology, a senior attending physician at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston. Dr. Popma received his bachelor’s degree in economics from Stanford University, and his M.D. from Indiana University School of Medicine. He completed his internship, residency, chief residency and fellowship at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He also completed an interventional cardiology fellowship at the University of Michigan. Dr. Popma is the past president of the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Intervention and is the co-chair of the ACC Interventional Council. He sits on the editorial boards of several publications, and reviews for several cardiology periodicals. Dr. Popma has more than 300 published peer-reviewed manuscripts.

Dr. Popma also directs the BIDMC Angiographic Core Laboratory and is principal investigator for more than 65 ongoing multicenter device studies within the research laboratory. Over the past 15 years, these trials have included a broad array of new technology, including bare-metal stents, drug-eluting stents, distal-protection devices, total-occlusion devices and carotid and peripheral revascularization procedures. His primary clinical interest currently is the use of percutaneous aortic valve replacement for patients with high-risk aortic stenosis.

Robert S. Poston, M.D., is chief of cardiac surgery at Boston Medical Center and associate professor of cardiothoracic surgery at Boston University School of Medicine. He has a strong background in minimally invasive cardiac bypass surgery and is a pioneer in using robotics, specifically the da Vinci Surgical System, to treat coronary artery disease. A graduate of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Dr. Poston completed a residency in general surgery at the University of California, San Francisco, and continued his training with a research fellowship in cardiothoracic surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, and a cardiothoracic residency at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Charanjit S. Rihal, M.D., is professor of medicine and director of the cardiac catheterization laboratory at Mayo Graduate School of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. A graduate of the University of Winnipeg, Dr. Rihal did his residency and fellowship at the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine and also earned an MBA at the Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota. His medical interests are interventional cardiology, structural heart disease interventions and the management of quality and costs in healthcare.

Timothy A. Shapiro, M.D., is director of the Interventional Cardiology Fellowship Program and campus chief, interventional cardiology, at Lankenau Hospital, Lancaster, PA. A graduate of Yale University School of Medicine, he served his residency and a fellowship at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Robert J. Siegel, M.D., is director of the Cardiac Non-Invasive Laboratory at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, cardiology director of the Cedars-Sinai Marfan Center, and Rexford S. Kennamer, M.D., chair in cardiac ultrasound at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles. Dr. Siegel is also professor of medicine in residence at the David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles. He previously served as senior staff fellow in cardiac pathology at the Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. Internationally recognized as one of the leading experts in the field of cardiovascular ultrasound, Dr. Siegel specializes in cardiovascular ultrasound, including transthoracic, transesophageal and intravascular methodologies. His research interests include

  • valvular heart disease,
  • therapeutic applications of ultrasound energy,
  • transesophageal and intraoperative echocardiography, and the
  • development and use of hand-held portable echocardiographic systems for clinical innovations.

In addition, he is involved with clinical research studies related to the diagnosis, assessment and management of patients with

  • Marfan syndrome,
  • hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and
  • pericardial and valvular heart disease.

Dr. Siegel is a fellow, and has previously served as the president of the California Chapter of the American College of Cardiology and president of the Los Angeles Society of Echocardiography. He has been active in numerous cardiovascular societies, including the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology and the American Society of Echocardiography. Dr. Siegel received his medical degree at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, where he developed an interest in cardiology. He completed his medical residency at Emory University and at Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center. He completed his cardiology fellowship at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center.

Over the last two years Dr. Siegel has worked extensively with live 3D transesophageal echo in the cardiac intervention center and the operating room. He and his echocardiologist colleagues, doctors Shiota, Biner, Tolstrup and Gurudevan, have worked closely at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles with the interventional cardiologists, doctors Kar and Makkar, as well as with the cardiac surgeons, doctors Trento and Fontana. They use live 3D TEE extensively for the assessment of structural heart disease. In addition, it is used on a regular basis for the guidance of percutaneous procedures for mitral valve e-clip repair, mitral balloon valvuloplasty, aortic and pulmonic valve replacement, left atrial appendage exclusion by the Watchman device as well as for ASD closure.

Sudhir P. Srivastava, M.D., president of the International College of Robotic Surgery at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Atlanta, is a pioneer in performing beating heart totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass surgeries. Previously, he was assistant professor of surgery and director of robotic and minimally invasive cardiac surgery at the University of Chicago Medical Center. Dr. Srivastava specializes in robotically assisted totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass surgery. He has performed approximately 1,000 robotic cardiothoracic surgical procedures, of which 450  have been single- and multivessel beating heart totally endoscopic coronary bypass (BH TECAB) procedures. He has keen interest in hybrid coronary revascularization in TECAB patients to achieve complete revascularization.

Dr. Srivastava has helped launch robotic revascularization programs throughout the world. He has performed numerous live BH TECAB demonstrations both in the U.S. and abroad, and continues to be a presenter and invited speaker at numerous national and international scientific meetings. He earned his medical degree at the Jawahar Lal Nehru Medical College in Ajmer, India and immigrated to the U.S. in 1972. He completed his cardiothoracic surgery residency at the hospitals associated with the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.

Francis P. Sutter, D.O., F.A.C.S., is clinical professor of surgery at Thomas Jefferson University-Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, and chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Lankenau Hospital, Main Line Health System, Wynnewood, PA. A graduate of Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, his surgical residency and a cardiothoracic fellowship were completed at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

Mark R. Vesely, M.D., is an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He completed medical school at the George Washington University and postgraduate training—an internal medicine residency and fellowships in cardiovascular disease and interventional cardiology—at the University of Maryland. He is board-certified in internal medicine, cardiovascular disease, nuclear cardiology and interventional cardiology. Dr. Vesely is the associate program director of the Interventional Cardiology fellowship at University of Maryland. His special interests include the partnered approach (interventional cardiologists and cardiac surgeons) for hybrid coronary revascularization and structural heart disease interventions. Additional research interests include investigation of techniques to minimize acute myocardial infarction injury with ventricular-assist devices and adult stem cell therapies.

David X. M. Zhao, M.D., Ph.D., is an associate professor of medicine and cardiac surgery, Harry and Shelley Page Chair in Interventional Cardiology, director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories and interventional cardiology director of the Interventional Cardiology Fellowship Training Program, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN. He earned his medical degree at Shanghai Medical University, Shanghai, P.R. China, and his Ph.D. in immunology at Queensland University, Brisbane, Australia. His postdoctoral training was at Zhongshan Hospital, Shanghai Medical University, Shanghai, P.R. China, The Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, Australia, and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

http://www.expo.acc.org/acc12/CUSTOM/images/ACC12/ACC.10%20Hybrid%20Suite%20Directory.pdf

Part Two

Cardiac Surgery

 

Cardiac Surgery @ Cleveland Clinic: Traditional OR & Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite

Nation #1 for 19 consecutive years – The Heart Center: Miller Family Heart & Vascular Institute @ Cleveland Clinic

The Sydell and Arnold Miller Family Heart & Vascular Institute is one of the largest, most experienced cardiovascular specialty groups in the world. Our physicians are committed to providing the most advanced diagnostic and treatment options, better outcomes and improved quality of life. U.S.News & World Reporthas ranked Cleveland Clinic as the No.1 heart program in America every year since 1995.

Departments & Centers:

Below we present two articles on Cardiac Surgery @ Mayo Clinic 

Cardiac Surgery @ Mayo Clinic: Traditional OR & Hybrid Cath Lab/OR Suite 

Coronary Reperfusion Therapies: CABG vs PCI – Mayo Clinic preprocedure Risk Score (MCRS) for Prediction of in-Hospital Mortality after CABG or PCI

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Comparison of the 10-year and 15-year survivals after CABG demonstrated benefit from a change in graft sources used at the Mayo Clinic and widely adapted by others: vascular grafts from the left internal mammary artery (LIMA) instead of just leg veins, for multiple grafts (up to 3), LIMA-to-LAD plus grafts using LIMA or radial artery vs LIMA/saphenous vein (SV).

CABG Survival in Multivessel Disease Patients: Comparison of Arterial Bypass Grafts vs Saphenous Venous Grafts

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Part Three 

Invasive Interventions with Complications

In the following article we covered multiple etiologies for cardiovascular complications related to invasive interventions: cardiovascular and peripheral arterial or peri- and post- cardiac surgery of the open heart type.

Cardiovascular Complications: Death from Reoperative Sternotomy after prior CABG, MVR, AVR, or Radiation; Complications of PCI; Sepsis from Cardiovascular Interventions

Justin D Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/07/23/cardiovascular-complications-of-multiple-etiologies-repeat-sternotomy-post-cabg-or-avr-post-pci-pad-endoscopy-andor-resultant-of-systemic-sepsis/

This article covers types of Cardiovascular Complications derived from the following THREE types of assault on the Human body, two related to cardiac invasive interventions, the last due to its systemic nature is taking a fatal Cardiac toll: the Sepsis condition causing cardiac failure.

Three types of Cardiovascular Complications:

I. Risk of Injury During Repeat Sternotomy – following CABG orAortic Valve Replacement, both done in Open Heart Surgery

II. Complications After Percutaneous Coronary intervention (PCI) and endovascular surgery for Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD)

  • (a) Post PCI, and
  • (b) PAD Endovascular Interventions: Carotid Artery Endarterectomy

III. Cardiac Failure During Systemic Sepsis

This article does NOT cover the following two types of Cardiovascular Complications:

1. Trauma Injury causing cardiac arrest, lung collapse or cardiogenic shock

2. Surgical Complication of Non-cardiac surgery type causing cardiac arrest, i.e, Surgery of Joint Replacement causing sepsis causing death or death caused by complications of surgery i.e., blood loss, viral infection, emboli, thrombus, stroke, or cardiogenic shock not related to Cardiovascular and Cardiac invasive interventions

The e-Reader is advised to consider the following expansion on the subject matter carrying the discussion to additional related clinical issues:

Larry H Bernstein, Advanced Topics in Sepsis and the Cardiovascular System at its End Stage

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/08/18/advanced-topics-in-sepsis-and-the-cardiovascular-system-at-its-end-stage/

Bernstein, HL, Pearlman, JD and A. Lev-Ari  Alternative Designs for the Human Artificial Heart: The Patients in Heart Failure – Outcomes of Transplant (donor)/Implantation (artificial) and Monitoring Technologies for the Transplant/Implant Patient in the Community

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/08/05/alternative-designs-for-the-human-artificial-heart-the-patients-in-heart-failure-outcomes-of-transplant-donorimplantation-artificial-and-monitoring-technologies-for-the-transplantimplant-pat/

Pearlman, JD and A. Lev-Ari Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (CRT) to Arrhythmias: Pacemaker/Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD) Insertion

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/07/22/cardiac-resynchronization-therapy-crt-to-arrhythmias-pacemakerimplantable-cardioverter-defibrillator-icd-insertion/

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AHA, ACC Change in Requirement for Surgical Support for PCI Performance: Class IIb -> Class III, Level of Evidence A: Support Nonemergent PCI without Surgical Backup (Change of class IIb, Level of evidence B).

AHA, ACC Change in Requirement for Surgical Support:  Class IIb -> Class III, Level of Evidence A: Supports Nonemergent PCI without Surgical Backup (Change of class IIb, Level of Evidence B).

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Author, Curator, Volumes 1,2,3,4,5,6 Co-Editor and Author, Volume Two & Five, Co-Editor and Justin Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC, Content Consultant to Six-Volume e-SERIES A: Cardiovascular Diseases

Article ID #68: AHA, ACC Change in Requirement for Surgical Support for PCI Performance: Class IIb -> Class III, Level of Evidence A: Support Nonemergent PCI without Surgical Backup (Change of class IIb, Level of evidence B). Published on 7/17/2013

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

 

Voice of content consultant: Justin Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC

The American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC) have convened teams of experts to summarize evidence and opinion regarding a wide range of decisions relevant to cardiovascular disease. The system accounts for some of the short comings of “evidence based medicine” by allowing for expert opinion in areas where evidence is not sufficient. The main argument for evidence-based medicine is the existence of surprises, where a plausible decision does not actually appear to work as desired when it is tested. A major problem with adhesion to evidence based medicine is that it can impede adaptation to individual needs (we are all genetically and socially/environmentally unique) and impede innovation. Large studies carry statistical weight but do not necessary consider all relevant factors. Commonly, the AFFIRM trial is interpreted as support that rate control suffices for most atrial fibrillation (AFIB), but half of those randomized to rhythm control were taken off anticoagulation without teaching patients to check their pulse daily for recurrence of AFIB. Thus the endorsed “evidence” may have more to do with the benefits of anticoagulation for both persisting and recurring AFIB and rhythm control may yet prove better than rate control. However, with wide acceptance of a particular conclusion, randomizing to another treatment may be deemed unethical, or may simply not get a large trial due to lack of economic incentive, leaving only the large trial products as the endorsed options. A medication without patent protection, such as bismuth salts for H Pylori infection, lacks financial backing for large trials.

The American Heart Association Evidence-Based Scoring System
Classification of Recommendations

● Class I: Conditions for which there is evidence, general

agreement, or both that a given procedure or treatment is

useful and effective.

● Class II: Conditions for which there is conflicting evidence,

a divergence of opinion, or both about the usefulness/

efficacy of a procedure or treatment.

● Class IIa: Weight of evidence/opinion is in favor of

usefulness/efficacy.

● Class IIb: Usefulness/efficacy is less well established by

evidence/opinion.

● Class III: Conditions for which there is evidence, general

agreement, or both that the procedure/treatment is not useful/

effective and in some cases may be harmful.

Level of Evidence

● Level of Evidence A: Data derived from multiple randomized

clinical trials

● Level of Evidence B: Data derived from a single randomized

trial or nonrandomized studies

● Level of Evidence C: Consensus opinion of experts

Circulation 2006 114: 1761 – 1791.

Assessment of Coronary Artery Disease by Cardiac Computed Tomography

A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association Committee on Cardiovascular Imaging and Intervention, Council on Cardiovascular Radiology and Intervention, and Committee on Cardiac Imaging, Council on Clinical Cardiology

Reported by Chris Kaiser, Cardiology Editor, MedPage  7/2013  

 

Action Points

  1. Patients with indications for nonemergency PCI who presented at hospitals without on-site cardiac surgery, were randomly assigned to undergo PCI at a hospital without on-site cardiac surgery or at a hospital with on-site cardiac surgery.
  2. The rates of death, myocardial infarction, repeat revascularization, and stroke did not differ significantly between the groups.
  3. Community hospitals without surgical services can safely perform percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in low-risk patients — and not refuse higher-risk patients either, the MASS COMM trial found.

Summary

  • The co-primary endpoint of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) at 30 days occurred at a rate of 9.5% in the 10 hospitals without surgical backup versus 9.4% in the seven hospitals with onsite surgery (P<0.001 for noninferiority), Alice K. Jacobs, MD, of Boston University School of Medicine, and colleagues found.
  • The other co-primary endpoint of MACE at 12 months was also significant, occurring in 17.3% of patients in hospitals without backup versus 17.8% in centers with surgical services (P<0.001 for non-inferiority), they reported in the study published online by the New England Journal of Medicine. The findings were also reported at the American College of Cardiology meeting.

Study Characteristics and Results

Primary Endpoints

  1. death
  2. myocardial infarction
  3. repeat revascularization
  4. stroke
no significant differences between the two groups at 30 days and at 12 months.

Rate of stent thrombosis at 30 days

similar in both groups (0.6% versus 0.8%) and at 12 months (1.1% versus 2.1%).
Jacobs and colleagues noted that the 2011 PCI guidelines lacked evidence to fully support nonemergent PCI without surgical backup (class IIb, level of evidence B).

CPORT – E trial

Even though those guidelines came out before the results of the CPORT-E trial were published, CPORT-E trial showed similar non-inferiority at 9 months between centers that perform PCI with or without surgical backup in a cohort of nearly 19,000 non-emergent patients. The CPORT-E results were published in the March 2012 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, and in May three cardiology organizations published an update to cath lab standards allowing for PCI without surgical.

 MASS COMM study

To further the evidence, Jacobs and colleagues in 2006  had designed and carried out the Randomized Trial to Compare Percutaneous Coronary Intervention between Massachusetts Hospitals with Cardiac Surgery On-Site and Community Hospitals without Cardiac Surgery On-Site (MASS COMM) in collaboration with the Massachusetts Department of Public Health who collaborated to obtain “evidence on which to base regulatory policy decisions about performing non-emergent PCI in hospitals without on-site cardiac surgery.”

  • Hospitals without backup surgery were required to perform at least 300 diagnostic catheterizations per year, and operators were mandated to have performed a minimum of 75 PCI procedures per year.
  • The researchers randomized 3,691 patients to each arm in a 3:1 ratio (without/with backup). The median follow-up was about 1 year.
  • The median age of patients was 64, one-third were women, and 92% were white. Both groups had similar median ejection fractions at baseline (55%).
  • The mean number of vessels treated was 1.17 and most patients (84%) had one vessel treated. The mean number of lesions treated was 1.45 and most patients (67%) had one lesion treated.

The indications for PCI were:

1. ST-segment elevated MI (>72 hours before PCI of infarct-related or non–infarct-related artery — 19% and 17%
2. Unstable angina — 45% and 47%
3. Stable angina — 27% and 28%
4. Silent ischemia — 5% and 6%
5. Other — 2.5% and 2.8%
Regarding secondary endpoints, both groups had similar rates of emergency CABG and urgent or emergent PCI at 30 days. Results at 30 days and 12 months were similar for rates of ischemia-driven target-vessel revascularization and target-lesion revascularization. Other endpoints as well were similar at both time points, including
  • all-cause death
  • repeat revascularization
  • stroke
  • definite or probable stent thrombosis
  • major vascular complications
Researchers adjusted for a 1.3 greater chance of MACE occurring at a randomly selected hospital compared with another randomly selected hospital and found
  • the relative risks at 30 days and 12 months “were consistent with those of the primary results” (RR 1.02 and 0.98, respectively).

However, they cautioned that new sites perhaps should be monitored as they gain experience.

A prespecified angiographic review of 376 patients who were in the PCI-without-backup arm and 87 in the other arm showed no differences in
  1. rates of procedural success,
  2. proportion with complete revascularization, or
  3. the proportion of guideline-indicated appropriate lesions for PCI.
Such results show consistent practice patterns between the groups, they noted.
The study had several limitations including the
  • loss of data for 13% of patients, the
  • exclusion of some patients for certain clinical and anatomical features, and
  • not having the power to detect non-inferiority in the separate components of the primary endpoint, researchers wrote.

Cardio Notes: Score Predicts PCI Readmission

Published: Jul 15, 2013

By Chris Kaiser, Cardiology Editor, MedPage Today
  

A simple calculation of patient variables before PCI may help stem the tide of readmission within the first month. Also this week, two blood pressure drugs that benefit diabetics and imaging cardiac sympathetic innervation.

Pre-PCI Factors Predict Return Trip

A new 30-day readmission risk prediction model for patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) showed it’s possible to predict risk using only variables known before PCI, according to a study published online in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes.

After multivariable adjustment, the 10 pre-PCI variables that predicted 30-day readmission were older age (mean age 68 in this study), female sex, insurance type (Medicare, state, or unknown), GFR category (less than 30 and 30-60 mL/min per 1.73m2), current or history of heart failure, chronic lung disease, peripheral vascular disease, cardiogenic shock at presentation, admit source (acute and non-acute care facility or emergency department), and previous coronary artery bypass graft surgery.

Additional significant variables post-discharge that predicted 30-day readmission were beta-blocker prescribed at discharge, post-PCI vascular or bleeding complications, discharge location, African American race, diabetes status and modality of treatment, any drug-eluting stent during the index procedure, and extended length of stay.

A risk score calculator using the pre-PCI variables will be available online soon, according to Robert W. Yeh, MD, MSc, of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and colleagues.

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