BACKGROUND: Coronary artery bypass grafting with concomitant coronary endarterectomy (CABG/CE) is used in patients with severe coronary atherosclerosis to revascularize otherwise ungraftable targets. This study investigates the efficacy of arterial versus vein grafting for CABG/CE surgery. METHODS: We reviewed our experience in 288 CABG/CE patients (63 +/- 10 years, 207 men). A total of 1,056 grafts (275 internal thoracic artery [ITA] [26%]; 221 radial [21%], 560 vein [53%]) were constructed including 325 (31%) placed to CE targets. RESULTS: Eighteen of 288 patients died in-hospital (6.3%). Unadjusted one-year and five-year survival for the 270 discharged patients was 95.2% and 83.0%, respectively. Survival (0 to 7 years) was significantly better for patients with radial (n = 154) versus no-radial (n = 134) artery grafting (p = 0.021). Multivariate Cox regression analysis associated increased number of arterial grafts (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.64 [0.44 to 0.92]; HR [95% confidence interval]) to improved survival, while RCA endarterectomy (HR = 1.8 1.0 3.3; p = 0.054) was associated with worse survival. Repeat angiography (495 days [median]) in 68 patients encompassed 78 CE (38 vein, 24 ITA, and 16 radial) and 162 non-CE (84 vein, 40 ITA, and 38 radial) grafts. Graft failure was similar (p = 0.37) for radial (10 of 54 [19%]) and ITA (7 of 64 [11%]), and worst for vein (50 of 122 [41%]; p < 0.001). For CE targets, graft failure was worse for vein (55% vs 35%; p = 0.05) and unchanged for arterial (13% vs 15%; p = 0.88) grafts. CONCLUSIONS: Combined CABG/CE is associated with good long-term outcomes. Increased arterial grafting achieved by radial artery utilization confers a survival benefit in this high-risk population. The latter is probably derived from superior radial versus vein graft patency.
BACKGROUND: Coronary artery bypass grafting with concomitant coronary endarterectomy (CABG/CE) is used in patients with severe coronary atherosclerosis to revascularize otherwise ungraftable targets. This study investigates the efficacy of arterial versus vein grafting for CABG/CE surgery. METHODS: We reviewed our experience in 288 CABG/CE patients (63 +/- 10 years, 207 men). A total of 1,056 grafts (275 internal thoracic artery [ITA] [26%]; 221 radial [21%], 560 vein [53%]) were constructed including 325 (31%) placed to CE targets. RESULTS: Eighteen of 288 patients died in-hospital (6.3%). Unadjusted one-year and five-year survival for the 270 discharged patients was 95.2% and 83.0%, respectively. Survival (0 to 7 years) was significantly better for patients with radial (n = 154) versus no-radial (n = 134) artery grafting (p = 0.021). Multivariate Cox regression analysis associated increased number of arterial grafts (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.64 [0.44 to 0.92]; HR [95% confidence interval]) to improved survival, while RCA endarterectomy (HR = 1.8 1.0 3.3; p = 0.054) was associated with worse survival. Repeat angiography (495 days [median]) in 68 patients encompassed 78 CE (38 vein, 24 ITA, and 16 radial) and 162 non-CE (84 vein, 40 ITA, and 38 radial) grafts. Graft failure was similar (p = 0.37) for radial (10 of 54 [19%]) and ITA (7 of 64 [11%]), and worst for vein (50 of 122 [41%]; p < 0.001). For CE targets, graft failure was worse for vein (55% vs 35%; p = 0.05) and unchanged for arterial (13% vs 15%; p = 0.88) grafts. CONCLUSIONS: Combined CABG/CE is associated with good long-term outcomes. Increased arterial grafting achieved by radial artery utilization confers a survival benefit in this high-risk population. The latter is probably derived from superior radial versus vein graft patency.
Authors: Damien J LaPar; Farshad Anvari; James N Irvine; John A Kern; Brian R Swenson; Irving L Kron; Gorav Ailawadi Journal: J Card Surg Date: 2011-04-07 Impact factor: 1.620
Authors: Paolo Nardi; Marco Russo; Guglielmo Saitto; Emanuele Bovio; Sara Rita Vacirca; Carlo Bassano; Antonio Scafuri; Antonio Pellegrino; Giovanni Ruvolo Journal: Kardiochir Torakochirurgia Pol Date: 2018-12-31