| Literature DB >> 31010423 |
Haiyan Xu1, Xiwen Zhang1, Jiangjin Li1, Hailang Liu1, Xiao Hu1, Jing Yang2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The best strategy for the treatment of the non-infarct artery in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and multivessel disease (MVD) undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is not yet defined.Entities:
Keywords: Complete revascularization; Infarct-related artery only revascularization; Multivessel disease; ST-elevation myocardial infarction
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31010423 PMCID: PMC6477715 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-019-1073-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing selection of studies for final analysis
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Multivessel disease definition | MACE definition | Definition of complete revascularization | Timing of staged complete revascularization | Follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COMPARE-ACUTE 2017 [ | IRA plus non-IRA or their major side branches of at least 2.0 mm diameter show ≥50% stenosis by QCA or visual assessment | All-causemortality, nonfatal MI, any revascularization, cerebrovascular events | Non-IRAs with at least 50% stenosis and who had a FFR ≤0.80 were revascularized with Everolimus DES | Within 3 days | 12 |
| Hamza et al. 2016 [ | IRA plus at least 80% stenosis in non-IRA | Composite of all- cause mortality, recurrent MI, ischemia driven revascularization with PCI or CABG | N-IRAs with at least 80% stenosis were revascularized. | Within 3 days | 6 |
| DANAMI-3- PRIMULTI 2015 [ | IRA plus > 50% stenosis in one or more non-IRA | Composite of all- cause mortality, reinfarction, or ischemia driven revascularization of non–IRA | Non-IRAs which were ≥ 2 mm in diameter with at least 50% stenosis and FFR < 0.8 or those with visually | Within 2 days | 27 |
| PRAGUE − 132,015 [ | at least 1 stenosis of non-IRA > 70% with diameter > 2.5 mm | All cause mortality, non- fatal MI and stroke. | NA | 3–40 days | 38 |
| CvLPRIT 2015 [ | IRA plus at least one non-IRA with at least one lesion> 70% single view/50% in two views | All-cause mortality, MI,HF, ischemia driven PCI OR CABG | Non-IRAs with at least > 70% stenosis in one view or > 50% stenosis in two views were revascularized with DES | Within 3 days | 12 |
| PRAMI 2013 [ | IRA plus one or more non-IRA > 50% stenosis | Composite of death from cardiac cause, nonfatal MI, refractory angina. | Non-IRA stenoses > 50% were intervened | At the same procedure | 23 |
| Ghani et al. 2012 [ | One or more stenoses of ≥50% (in at least one view visually or by QCA) in at least two major epicardial coronary arteries | Death, nonfatal reinfarction, unplanned revascularization | Vessel with significant stenosis vascularized if FFR < 0.75. For severe stenosis (> 90%) PCI performed without preceding FFR. | Within 3 weeks after STEMI | 36 |
| Politi et al. 2010 [ | > 70% stenosis of at least two epicardial coronary arteries or their major branches | Death, reinfarction, rehospitalization for ACS and repeat coronary revascularization | Non-IRAs with PCI and angiographic residual stenosis of < 30% or TIMI flow grade of 3 | 56.8 ± 12.9 days | 30 |
| HELP AMI 2004 [ | IRA plus at least 1–3 lesions in major non-IRA | Death, repeat MI, urgent revascularization | All suitable non-IRAs with heparin coated Bx velocity stents. Balloon dilatation alone was performed for lesions in vessels with diameter < 2.5 mm provided at least one non-IRA was treated with stents. | At the same procedure | 12 |
IRA infarct-related artery only, QCA quantitative coronary angiography, MACE major adverse cardiac events, MI myocardial infarction, ACS acute coronary sydrome, PCI percutaneouscoronary intervention, CABG coronary artery bypass grafting, FFR fractional flow reserve, TIMT thrombolysis in myocardial infarction
Baseline patient characteristics
| Study | Number (CR/IRA-only) (n) | Male (CR/IRA-only) (%) | Age (CR/IRA-only) (years) | Hypertension (CR/IRA-only) (%) | Diabetes (CR/IRA-only) (%) | Previous MI (CR/IRA-only) (%) | Smoking (CR/IRA-only) (%) |
| COMPARE-ACUTE 2017 [ | 295/590 | 79/76 | 62/61 | 46/48 | 15/16 | 7.5/8.1 | 41/49 |
| Hamza et al. 2016 [ | 50/50 | 82/86 | 56/52 | 26/36 | 100/100 | 10/6 | 72/78 |
| DANAMI-3- PRIMULTI 2015 [ | 314/313 | 80/81 | 64/63 | 41/47 | 9/13 | 5/9 | 51/48 |
| PRAGUE − 132,015 [ | 106/108 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| CvLPRIT 2015 [ | 150/146 | 85/77 | 64/65 | 37/36 | 13/14 | 4.8/3.6 | 34/37 |
| PRAMI 2013 [ | 234/231 | 76/81 | 62/62 | 40/40 | 15/21 | 8/7 | 50/45 |
| Ghani et al. 2012 | 79/40 | 80/81 | 62/61 | 26/43 | 6.3/5.0 | 6.3/4.9 | 44/48 |
| Politi et al. 2010 [ | 130/84 | 77/78 | 65/67 | 57/60 | 23/24 | NA | NA |
| HELP AMI 2004 [ | 52/17 | 88/85 | 64/65 | 37/59 | 12/41 | NA | 67/81 |
| Study | Anterior MI (CR/IRA-only) (%) | Procedure time (CR/IRA-only) (min) | Contrast Media (CR/IRA-only) (ml) | Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa Inhibitors (CR/IRA-only) (%) | DES (CR/IRA-only) (years) | ||
| COMPARE-ACUTE 2017 [ | 36/35 | 65/59 | 224/202 | 22/25 | 95/96 | ||
| Hamza et al. 2016 [ | 48/46 | NA | NA | 38/34 | 100/100 | ||
| DANAMI-3- PRIMULTI 2015 [ | 33/36 | 76/42 | 280/170 | 20/23 | 95/93 | ||
| PRAGUE − 132,015 [ | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | ||
| CvLPRIT 2015 [ | 36/36 | 55/41 | 250/190 | 32/32 | 96/91 | ||
| PRAMI 2013 [ | 29/39 | 63/45 | 300/200 | 79/78 | 63/58 | ||
| Ghani et al. 2012 [ | NA | NA | NA | 45/46 | 23/17 | ||
| Politi et al. 2010 [ | 48/42 | NA | NA | 100/100 | NA | ||
| HELP AMI 2004 [ | 52/59 | 53/69 | 341/242 | 75/82 | 0/0 | ||
CR complete revascularization, IRA infarct-related artery only, DES drug-eluting stent, NA not available
Fig. 2Relative risk for all-cause mortality for complete revascularization (CR) versus infarct-related coronary artery (IRA) only revascularization
Fig. 3Relative risk for major adverse cardiac events (MACE) for complete revascularization (CR) versus infarct-related coronary artery (IRA) only revascularization
Fig. 4Relative risk for cardiac death for complete revascularization (CR) versus infarct-related coronary artery (IRA) only revascularization
Fig. 5Relative risk for recurrent myocardial infarction(MI) for complete revascularization (CR) versus infarct-related coronary artery (IRA) only revascularization
Fig. 6Relative risk for repeat revascularization for complete revascularization (CR) versus infarct-related coronary artery (IRA) only revascularization