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Quality of life after late invasive therapy for occluded arteries. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the open-artery hypothesis, testing if late-opening of an infarct-related artery through percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) plus stenting improves patient outcomes after a heart attack compared to medical therapy alone.
  • The results showed that while PCI offered a slight improvement in cardiac function at 4 months, this benefit diminished over time, and there were no significant differences in psychological well-being between the two groups.
  • Additionally, medical therapy was found to be significantly less expensive and associated with marginally longer quality-adjusted survival after two years compared to routine PCI.

Article Abstract

Background: The open-artery hypothesis postulates that late opening of an infarct-related artery after myocardial infarction will improve clinical outcomes. We evaluated the quality-of-life and economic outcomes associated with the use of this strategy.

Methods: We compared percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) plus stenting with medical therapy alone in high-risk patients in stable condition who had a totally occluded infarct-related artery 3 to 28 days after myocardial infarction. In 951 patients (44% of those eligible), we assessed quality of life by means of a battery of tests that included two principal outcome measures, the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) (which measures cardiac physical function on a scale from 0 to 58, with higher scores indicating better function) and the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Mental Health Inventory 5 (which measures psychological well-being). Structured quality-of-life interviews were performed at baseline and at 4, 12, and 24 months. Costs of treatment were assessed for 458 of 469 patients in the United States (98%), and 2-year cost-effectiveness was estimated.

Results: At 4 months, the medical-therapy group, as compared with the PCI group, had a clinically marginal decrease of 3.4 points in the DASI score (P=0.007). At 1 and 2 years, the differences were smaller. No significant differences in psychological well-being were observed. For the 469 patients in the United States, cumulative 2-year costs were approximately $7,000 higher in the PCI group (P<0.001), and the quality-adjusted survival was marginally longer in the medical-therapy group.

Conclusions: PCI was associated with a marginal advantage in cardiac physical function at 4 months but not thereafter. At 2 years, medical therapy remained significantly less expensive than routine PCI and was associated with marginally longer quality-adjusted survival. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00004562.)

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2724193PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa0805151DOI Listing

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