AI Article Synopsis

  • Coronary artery disease with heavily calcified lesions can lead to worse outcomes, including higher mortality rates, motivating a study on the effectiveness of combining CABG and TMLR in patients with severe coronary atherosclerosis.
  • The study followed 86 patients who either received combined therapy (CABG + TMLR) or single therapy (either CABG or TMLR) from 1997 to 2002, revealing a 10-year survival rate of 78.3% for the combined group versus 72.5% for the single therapy group.
  • Significant survival benefits were observed only for the anterior heart wall, highlighting that while combined therapy may improve perioperative mortality, overall cardiac mortality remained high in the long term

Article Abstract

Coronary artery disease involving heavily calcified lesions has been associated with worse short- and long-term outcomes including increased mortality. This paper aims to evaluate long-term survival benefit when CABG + transmyocardial laser revascularization (TMLR) are performed on the hearts of patients with disseminated coronary atherosclerosis (DCA). This novel retrospective study was conducted between 1997 and 2002 and followed 86 patients with ischemic heart disease and severe DCA who underwent TMLR using a Holmium:YAG laser and/or CABG. There were 46 patients who had CABG plus TMLR on at least one heart wall ("combined therapy group") and 40 patients who had CABG or TMLR separately on at least one heart wall ("single therapy group"). For the whole group, actuarial survival at 10 years was 78.3% in the combined group compared to 72.5% in the single therapy group (p = 0.535). Ten-year survival in the combined vs. single therapy group for the anterior heart walls was 100 vs. 72.2% (p = 0.027). For the lateral and posterior heart walls were 73.7 vs. 73.3% (p = 0.97) and 84.2 vs. 72% (p = 0.27), respectively. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed benefit only for the anterior heart wall (F Cox test, p = 0.103). Single therapy procedures on all heart walls (odds ratio 1.736, p = 0.264) or on the anterior heart wall only (odds ratio 3.286, p = 0.279) were found to be predictors of 10-year late mortality. Combined therapy (TMLR + CABG) provides benefit for perioperative mortality and long-term survival only when provided on the anterior heart wall. For patients with disseminated coronary atherosclerosis, cardiac mortality was found to be increased when followed up 6 years later, regardless of the therapy applied.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6133034PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10103-018-2514-9DOI Listing

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