Clinical and Vessel Characteristics Associated With Hard Outcomes After PCI and Their Combined Prognostic Implications.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_8C69445853A7
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Clinical and Vessel Characteristics Associated With Hard Outcomes After PCI and Their Combined Prognostic Implications.
Journal
Journal of the American Heart Association
Author(s)
Yang S., Hwang D., Zhang J., Park J., Yun J.P., Lee J.M., Nam C.W., Shin E.S., Doh J.H., Chen S.L., Kakuta T., Toth G.G., Piroth Z., Johnson N.P., Hakeem A., Uretsky B.F., Hokama Y., Tanaka N., Lim H.S., Ito T., Matsuo A., Azzalini L., Leesar M.A., Neleman T., van Mieghem N.M., Diletti R., Daemen J., Collison D., Collet C., De Bruyne B., Koo B.K.
ISSN
2047-9980 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2047-9980
Publication state
Published
Issued date
05/09/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
12
Number
17
Pages
e030572
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Meta-Analysis ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Background Cardiac death or myocardial infarction still occurs in patients undergoing contemporary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We aimed to identify adverse clinical and vessel characteristics related to hard outcomes after PCI and to investigate their individual and combined prognostic implications. Methods and Results From an individual patient data meta-analysis of 17 cohorts of patients who underwent post-PCI fractional flow reserve measurement after drug-eluting stent implantation, 2081 patients with available clinical and vessel characteristics were analyzed. The primary outcome was cardiac death or target-vessel myocardial infarction at 2 years. The mean age of patients was 64.2±10.2 years, and the mean angiographic percent diameter stenosis was 63.9%±14.3%. Among 11 clinical and 8 vessel features, 4 adverse clinical characteristics (age ≥65 years, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, and left ventricular ejection fraction <50%) and 2 adverse vessel characteristics (post-PCI fractional flow reserve ≤0.80 and total stent length ≥54 mm) were identified to independently predict the primary outcome (all P<0.05). The number of adverse vessel characteristics had additive predictability for the primary end point to that of adverse clinical characteristics (area under the curve 0.72 versus 0.78; P=0.03) and vice versa (area under the curve 0.68 versus 0.78; P=0.03). The cumulative event rate increased in the order of none, either, and both of adverse clinical characteristics ≥2 and adverse vessel characteristics ≥1 (0.3%, 2.4%, and 5.3%; P for trend <0.01). Conclusions In patients undergoing drug-eluting stent implantation, adverse clinical and vessel characteristics were associated with the risk of cardiac death or target-vessel myocardial infarction. Because these characteristics showed independent and additive prognostic value, their integrative assessment can optimize post-PCI risk stratification. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04684043. www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/. Unique Identifier: CRD42021234748.
Keywords
Humans, Middle Aged, Aged, Drug-Eluting Stents, Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/adverse effects, Prognosis, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Myocardial Infarction, drug‐eluting stent, fractional flow reserve, risk stratification
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/09/2023 10:23
Last modification date
19/12/2023 8:14
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