| Literature DB >> 24581924 |
Gill Louise Buchanan1, Alaide Chieffo2, Emanuele Meliga3, Roxana Mehran4, Seung-Jung Park5, Yoshinobu Onuma6, Piera Capranzano7, Marco Valgimigli8, Inga Narbute9, Raj R Makkar10, Igor F Palacios11, Young-Hak Kim5, Piotr P Buszman12, Tarun Chakravarty10, Imad Sheiban13, Christoph Naber14, Ronan Margey11, Arvind Agnihotri11, Sebastiano Marra13, Davide Capodanno7, Victoria Allgar15, Martin B Leon16, Jeffrey W Moses16, Jean Fajadet17, Thierry Lefevre18, Marie-Claude Morice18, Andrejs Erglis9, Corrado Tamburino7, Ottavio Alfieri1, Patrick W Serruys6, Antonio Colombo1.
Abstract
Women typically present with coronary artery disease later than men with more unfavorable clinical and anatomic characteristics. It is unknown whether differences exist in women undergoing treatment for unprotected left main coronary artery (ULMCA) disease. Our aim was to evaluate long-term clinical outcomes in women treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stents versus coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). All consecutive women from the Drug-Eluting stent for LefT main coronary Artery disease registry with ULMCA disease were analyzed. A propensity matching was performed to adjust for baseline differences. In total, 817 women were included: 489 (59.8%) underwent treatment with PCI with drug-eluting stents versus 328 (40.2%) with CABG. Propensity score matching identified 175 matched pairs, and at long-term follow-up there were no differences in all-cause (odds ratio [OR] 0.722, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.357 to 1.461, p=0.365) or cardiovascular (OR 1.100, 95% CI 0.455 to 2.660, p=0.832) mortality, myocardial infarction (MI; OR 0.362, 95% CI 0.094 to 1.388, p=0.138), or cerebrovascular accident (CVA; OR 1.200, 95% CI 0.359 to 4.007, p=0.767) resulting in no difference in the primary study objective of death, MI, or CVA (OR 0.711, 95% CI 0.387 to 1.308, p=0.273). However, there was an advantage of CABG in major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events (OR 0.429, 95% CI 0.254 to 0.723, p=0.001), driven exclusively by target vessel revascularization (OR 0.185, 95% CI 0.079 to 0.432, p<0.001). In women with significant ULMCA disease, no difference was observed after PCI or CABG in death, MI, and CVA at long-term follow-up.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24581924 DOI: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2014.01.409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cardiol ISSN: 0002-9149 Impact factor: 2.778