BACKGROUND: It is currently unknown whether revascularization procedures are associated with an improvement in mortality among diabetic subjects, as compared with a more conservative medical treatment. METHODS AND RESULTS: In MASS II, a total of 611 patients with stable multivessel coronary disease were randomly assigned to medical treatment, surgery, or angioplasty. From these, 190 patients had diabetes (medical, 75 patients; angioplasty, 56 patients; surgery, 59 patients) and comprised the present study population. Mortality rates were analyzed for the entire 5 years of follow-up. Separate analyzes were also performed for mortality at 2 time intervals: during the first year and after the first year of follow-up. We calculated the probability of death conditional on surviving to the start of the interval analyzed. The cumulative 5-year mortality as well as the mortality during the first year of follow-up was not significantly different among treatment groups, both for diabetic and for nondiabetic subjects. Also, during years 2 to 5, the mortality of the 3 treatment groups was not different for nondiabetic subjects. Among diabetic subjects, however, patients randomized to angioplasty or surgery had a significantly lower mortality between years 2 and 5 than those allocated to medical treatment (P=0.039). CONCLUSIONS: Surgery, angioplasty, and medical treatment appear to be associated with similar mortality rates for non-diabetic subjects. For diabetic subjects, however, coronary revascularization (percutaneous or surgical) significantly decreased the risk of death after the first year and up to 5 years, compared with medical treatment alone.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: It is currently unknown whether revascularization procedures are associated with an improvement in mortality among diabetic subjects, as compared with a more conservative medical treatment. METHODS AND RESULTS: In MASS II, a total of 611 patients with stable multivessel coronary disease were randomly assigned to medical treatment, surgery, or angioplasty. From these, 190 patients had diabetes (medical, 75 patients; angioplasty, 56 patients; surgery, 59 patients) and comprised the present study population. Mortality rates were analyzed for the entire 5 years of follow-up. Separate analyzes were also performed for mortality at 2 time intervals: during the first year and after the first year of follow-up. We calculated the probability of death conditional on surviving to the start of the interval analyzed. The cumulative 5-year mortality as well as the mortality during the first year of follow-up was not significantly different among treatment groups, both for diabetic and for nondiabetic subjects. Also, during years 2 to 5, the mortality of the 3 treatment groups was not different for nondiabetic subjects. Among diabetic subjects, however, patients randomized to angioplasty or surgery had a significantly lower mortality between years 2 and 5 than those allocated to medical treatment (P=0.039). CONCLUSIONS: Surgery, angioplasty, and medical treatment appear to be associated with similar mortality rates for non-diabetic subjects. For diabetic subjects, however, coronary revascularization (percutaneous or surgical) significantly decreased the risk of death after the first year and up to 5 years, compared with medical treatment alone.
Authors: Sameer Bansilal; Michael E Farkouh; Whady Hueb; May Ogdie; George Dangas; Alexandra J Lansky; David J Cohen; Elizabeth A Magnuson; Krishnan Ramanathan; Jean-Francois Tanguay; Victoria Muratov; Lynn A Sleeper; Michael Domanski; Michel E Bertrand; Valentin Fuster Journal: Am Heart J Date: 2012-10 Impact factor: 4.749
Authors: Thomas A Trikalinos; Alawi A Alsheikh-Ali; Athina Tatsioni; Brahmajee K Nallamothu; David M Kent Journal: Lancet Date: 2009-03-14 Impact factor: 79.321
Authors: Vasilios G Athyros; Thomas D Gossios; Konstantinos Tziomalos; Matilda Florentin; Asterios Karagiannis; Dimitri P Mikhailidis Journal: Arch Med Sci Date: 2011-12-30 Impact factor: 3.318