CBS 2019
CBSMD教育中心
中 文

推荐文献

Abstract

Recommended Article

Percutaneous coronary intervention using a combination of robotics and telecommunications by an operator in a separate physical location from the patient: an early exploration into the feasibility of telestenting (the REMOTE-PCI study) Quantitative Assessment of Coronary Microvascular Function: Dynamic Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography, Positron Emission Tomography, Ultrasound, Computed Tomography, and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Major trials in coronary intervention from 2018 Individualizing Revascularization Strategy for Diabetic Patients With Multivessel Coronary Disease Management of two major complications in the cardiac catheterisation laboratory: the no-reflow phenomenon and coronary perforations A Novel Algorithm for Treating Chronic Total Coronary Artery Occlusion Multimodality imaging in cardiology: a statement on behalf of the Task Force on Multimodality Imaging of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging Relation of prior statin and anti-hypertensive use to severity of disease among patients hospitalized with COVID-19: Findings from the American Heart Association’s COVID-19 Cardiovascular Disease Registry

Original ResearchVolume 75, Issue 14, April 2020

JOURNAL:JACC Article Link

Long-Term Outcomes in Women and Men Following Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

I Kosmidou, R Mehran, GW Stone et al. Keywords: mortality; outcomes; PCI; sex

ABSTRACT


BACKGROUND - Studies examining sex-related outcomes following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) have reported conflicting results.

 

OBJECTIVES - The purpose of this study was to examine the sex-related risk of 5-year cardiovascular outcomes after PCI.

 

METHODS - The authors pooled patient-level data from 21 randomized PCI trials and assessed the association between sex and major adverse cardiac events (MACE) (cardiac death, myocardial infarction [MI], or ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization [ID-TLR]) as well as its individual components at 5 years.

 

RESULTS - Among 32,877 patients, 9,141 (27.8%) were women. Women were older and had higher body mass index, more frequent hypertension and diabetes, and less frequent history of surgical or percutaneous revascularization compared with men. By angiographic core laboratory analysis, lesions in women had smaller reference vessel diameter and shorter lesion length. At 5 years, women had a higher unadjusted rate of MACE (18.9% vs. 17.7%; p = 0.003), all-cause death (10.4% vs. 8.7%; p = 0.0008), cardiac death (4.9% vs. 4.0%; p = 0.003) and ID-TLR (10.9% vs. 10.2%; p = 0.02) compared with men. By multivariable analysis, female sex was an independent predictor of MACE (hazard ratio [HR:]: 1.14; 95% confidence interval [CI:]: 1.01 to 1.30; p = 0.04) and ID-TLR (HR: 1.23; 95% CI: 1.05 to 1.44; p = 0.009) but not all-cause death (HR: 0.91; 95% CI: 0.75 to 1.09; p = 0.30) or cardiac death (HR: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.73 to 1.29; p = 0.85).

 

CONCLUSIONS - In the present large-scale, individual patient data pooled analysis of contemporary PCI trials, women had a higher risk of MACE and ID-TLR compared with men at 5 years following PCI.