AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies indicate that "facilitated" percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) might be harmful for STEMI patients, prompting an analysis of 1,553 patients who underwent PCI within 6 hours at a tertiary center.
  • The study compared primary PCI patients, who received immediate treatment, to facilitated PCI patients, who were pretreated at a community hospital before transfer.
  • Results showed that facilitated PCI had longer wait times but fewer major adverse outcomes for patients with certain door-to-balloon times, suggesting it can be a safe option to enhance pharmacologic reperfusion in select STEMI cases.

Article Abstract

Recent studies have documented that use of "facilitated" percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) may be harmful. In-hospital outcomes in 1,553 consecutive patients with STEMI without cardiogenic shock who underwent PCI at a single tertiary center within 6 hours of presentation were analyzed. The study group included 767 patients who underwent primary PCI who initially presented to the tertiary center and were triaged for emergent PCI and 786 patients who underwent facilitated PCI who were pretreated at a community hospital with a glycoprotein IIb/IIIa platelet inhibitor and/or intravenous thrombolytic therapy before transfer for catheter-based therapy. Compared with patients who underwent primary PCI, the facilitated PCI group had longer door-to-balloon times (162 +/- 57 vs 113 +/- 61 minutes), higher baseline infarct-vessel TIMI 3 flow rates (52.8% vs 25.4%; p <0.001), and no increase in major adverse in-hospital outcomes. In patients treated with door-to-balloon times >90 and < or =150 minutes, patients who underwent facilitated PCI had fewer composite major adverse clinical events (combined mortality, recurrent myocardial infarction, emergent repeated PCI, hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic stroke, and nonintracranial TIMI major bleeding) compared with patients who underwent primary PCI (relative risk 0.50, 95% confidence interval 0.26 to 0.96, p = 0.034). In conclusion, facilitated PCI can be safely used to increase pharmacologic reperfusion before catheter-based therapy in patients with STEMI without an increase in clinical hazard and with fewer major adverse clinical events in patients treated with door-to-balloon times >90 and < or =150 minutes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2008.09.078DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients underwent
20
facilitated pci
16
myocardial infarction
12
underwent primary
12
primary pci
12
pci
11
patients
10
percutaneous coronary
8
coronary intervention
8
patients st-segment
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!