AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiac surgery for coronary artery disease decreased significantly during the first COVID-19 pandemic wave, leading many patients to receive percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) instead of the usual coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).
  • A study tracked 215 patients who underwent PCI, gathering 12-month outcomes like death, heart attacks, and other complications to evaluate the procedure's effectiveness.
  • Results showed that after a year, PCI had acceptable outcomes with low rates of major adverse events, suggesting the need for further research comparing PCI to CABG in similar patient populations.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Cardiac surgery for coronary artery disease was dramatically reduced during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Many patients with disease ordinarily treated with coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) instead underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We sought to describe 12-month outcomes following PCI in patients who would typically have undergone CABG.

Methods: Between March 1 and July 31, 2020, patients who received revascularization with PCI when CABG would have been the primary choice of revascularization were enrolled in the prospective, multicenter UK-ReVasc Registry. We evaluated the following major adverse cardiovascular events at 12 months: all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, repeat revascularization, stroke, major bleeding, and stent thrombosis.

Results: A total of 215 patients were enrolled across 45 PCI centers in the United Kingdom. Twelve-month follow up data were obtained for 97% of the cases. There were 9 deaths (4.3%), 5 myocardial infarctions (2.4%), 12 repeat revascularizations (5.7%), 1 stroke (0.5%), 3 major bleeds (1.4%), and no cases of stent thrombosis. No difference in the primary endpoint was observed between patients who received complete vs incomplete revascularization (residual SYNTAX score £ 8 vs > 8) (P = .22).

Conclusions: In patients with patterns of coronary disease in whom CABG would have been the primary therapeutic choice outside of the pandemic, PCI was associated with acceptable outcomes at 12 months of follow-up. Contemporary randomized trials that compare PCI to CABG in such patient cohorts may be warranted.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.25270/jic/24.00030DOI Listing

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