Fractional Flow Reserve-Guided PCI or Coronary Bypass Surgery for 3-Vessel Coronary Artery Disease: 3-Year Follow-Up of the FAME 3 Trial.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_4A66F45B0AE3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Fractional Flow Reserve-Guided PCI or Coronary Bypass Surgery for 3-Vessel Coronary Artery Disease: 3-Year Follow-Up of the FAME 3 Trial.
Journal
Circulation
Author(s)
Zimmermann F.M., Ding V.Y., Pijls NHJ, Piroth Z., van Straten AHM, Szekely L., Davidavicius G., Kalinauskas G., Mansour S., Kharbanda R., Östlund-Papadogeorgos N., Aminian A., Oldroyd K.G., Al-Attar N., Jagic N., Dambrink J.E., Kala P., Angeras O., MacCarthy P., Wendler O., Casselman F., Witt N., Mavromatis K., Miner SES, Sarma J., Engstrøm T., Christiansen E.H., Tonino PAL, Reardon M.J., Otsuki H., Kobayashi Y., Hlatky M.A., Mahaffey K.W., Desai M., Woo Y.J., Yeung A.C., De Bruyne B., Fearon W.F.
Working group(s)
FAME 3 Investigators
ISSN
1524-4539 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0009-7322
Publication state
Published
Issued date
19/09/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
148
Number
12
Pages
950-958
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Randomized Controlled Trial ; Multicenter Study ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Previous studies comparing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in patients with multivessel coronary disease not involving the left main have shown significantly lower rates of death, myocardial infarction (MI), or stroke after CABG. These studies did not routinely use current-generation drug-eluting stents or fractional flow reserve (FFR) to guide PCI.
FAME 3 (Fractional Flow Reserve versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation) is an investigator-initiated, multicenter, international, randomized trial involving patients with 3-vessel coronary artery disease (not involving the left main coronary artery) in 48 centers worldwide. Patients were randomly assigned to receive FFR-guided PCI using zotarolimus drug-eluting stents or CABG. The prespecified key secondary end point of the trial reported here is the 3-year incidence of the composite of death, MI, or stroke.
A total of 1500 patients were randomized to FFR-guided PCI or CABG. Follow-up was achieved in >96% of patients in both groups. There was no difference in the incidence of the composite of death, MI, or stroke after FFR-guided PCI compared with CABG (12.0% versus 9.2%; hazard ratio [HR], 1.3 [95% CI, 0.98-1.83]; P=0.07). The rates of death (4.1% versus 3.9%; HR, 1.0 [95% CI, 0.6-1.7]; P=0.88) and stroke (1.6% versus 2.0%; HR, 0.8 [95% CI, 0.4-1.7]; P=0.56) were not different. MI occurred more frequently after PCI (7.0% versus 4.2%; HR, 1.7 [95% CI, 1.1-2.7]; P=0.02).
At 3-year follow-up, there was no difference in the incidence of the composite of death, MI, or stroke after FFR-guided PCI with current-generation drug-eluting stents compared with CABG. There was a higher incidence of MI after PCI compared with CABG, with no difference in death or stroke. These results provide contemporary data to allow improved shared decision-making between physicians and patients with 3-vessel coronary artery disease.
URL: https://www.
gov; Unique identifier: NCT02100722.
Keywords
Humans, Coronary Artery Disease/surgery, Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial, Follow-Up Studies, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/adverse effects, Coronary Artery Bypass/adverse effects, Myocardial Infarction, Stroke/epidemiology, Stroke/etiology, coronary artery bypass, drug-eluting stents, percutaneous coronary intervention
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/09/2023 12:29
Last modification date
19/12/2023 8:14
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