Yousef Saad1, Ibrahim M Shugman1, Manish Kumar2, Iwona Pauk2, Christian Mussap1, Andrew P Hopkins1, Rohan Rajaratnam1, Sidney Lo1, Craig P Juergens1, John K French3. 1. South Western Sydney Clinical School, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia; Cardiology Department, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia. 2. Cardiology Department, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia. 3. South Western Sydney Clinical School, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia; Cardiology Department, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia. Electronic address: j.french@unsw.edu.au.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As patients are increasingly undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with same-day discharge (SDD), and as post-PCI troponin T (TnT) elevations are associated with increased rates of death/myocardial infarction (MI) following elective PCI, we examined late outcomes with respect to post-PCI TnT elevations in patients undergoing SDD. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 303 patients (mean age 62±9years, 89% male) who underwent elective-PCI between October 2007 and September 2012, of whom 149 had SDD and 154 stayed overnight (ON) who were age-and sex-matched. Eligibility for SDD excluded patients with: multi-vessel PCI, proximal LAD lesions, chronic total occlusions, side branch occlusions, or access site complications. Femoral access rates were 72% and 96% among SDD and ON patients respectively. Post-PCI, SDD patients left at 4.40[4.13-5.30]hours, and ON patients left at 23.44[21.50-25.41]hours (p<0.001). Overall 8.45% met the 2012 universal MI definition. No patients were re-hospitalised within 48hours. At 30-days, unplanned cardiac re-hospitalisation rates were 3.4% and 0.7% among SDD and ON patients (p=0.118); the only event was MI in an SDD patient. At 16[9-32] months, rates of death, MI, target vessel revascularisation, stroke, were 1.3%,1.3%,2.7% and 1% respectively; the composite rate was 6%(6.1% SDD; 6% ON; p=0.965). Late death/MI rates among patients with, and without, post-PCI TnT levels≥5xURL were 3.4% and 2.8% respectively (p=0.588). CONCLUSION: SDD following elective PCI among low risk patients appears to be safe and ≥5 fold post-PCI TnT elevations did not appear to confer incremental short and long term risk. A larger cohort is required to confirm this observation.
BACKGROUND: As patients are increasingly undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with same-day discharge (SDD), and as post-PCI troponin T (TnT) elevations are associated with increased rates of death/myocardial infarction (MI) following elective PCI, we examined late outcomes with respect to post-PCI TnT elevations in patients undergoing SDD. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 303 patients (mean age 62±9years, 89% male) who underwent elective-PCI between October 2007 and September 2012, of whom 149 had SDD and 154 stayed overnight (ON) who were age-and sex-matched. Eligibility for SDD excluded patients with: multi-vessel PCI, proximal LAD lesions, chronic total occlusions, side branch occlusions, or access site complications. Femoral access rates were 72% and 96% among SDD and ON patients respectively. Post-PCI, SDD patients left at 4.40[4.13-5.30]hours, and ON patients left at 23.44[21.50-25.41]hours (p<0.001). Overall 8.45% met the 2012 universal MI definition. No patients were re-hospitalised within 48hours. At 30-days, unplanned cardiac re-hospitalisation rates were 3.4% and 0.7% among SDD and ON patients (p=0.118); the only event was MI in an SDD patient. At 16[9-32] months, rates of death, MI, target vessel revascularisation, stroke, were 1.3%,1.3%,2.7% and 1% respectively; the composite rate was 6%(6.1% SDD; 6% ON; p=0.965). Late death/MI rates among patients with, and without, post-PCI TnT levels≥5xURL were 3.4% and 2.8% respectively (p=0.588). CONCLUSION: SDD following elective PCI among low risk patients appears to be safe and ≥5 fold post-PCI TnT elevations did not appear to confer incremental short and long term risk. A larger cohort is required to confirm this observation.
Authors: Amit P Amin; Patricia Crimmins-Reda; Samantha Miller; Brandon Rahn; Mary Caruso; Andrew Pierce; Brandy Dennis; Marissa Pendegraft; Katrine Sorensen; Howard I Kurz; John M Lasala; Alan Zajarias; Richard G Bach; Hemant Kulkarni; Jasvindar Singh Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Date: 2018-02-15 Impact factor: 5.501
Authors: Kais Hyasat; Giuseppe Femia; Karam Alzuhairi; Andrew Ha; Joseph Kamand; Edmund Hasche; Rohan Rajaratnam; Sidney Lo; Hamid Almafragy; Kevin Liou; Joseph Chiha; Kaleab Asrress Journal: Clin Med Insights Cardiol Date: 2022-08-23