| Literature DB >> 32182847 |
Ingo Eitel1,2, Juan Wang1,2,3, Thomas Stiermaier1,2, Georg Fuernau1,2, Hans-Josef Feistritzer4, Alexander Joost1,2, Alexander Jobs4, Moritz Meusel1,2, Christian Blodau1,2, Steffen Desch4, Suzanne de Waha-Thiele1,2, Harald Langer1,2, Holger Thiele4.
Abstract
Current evidence regarding the effect of intravenous morphine administration on reperfusion injury and/or cardioprotection in patients with myocardial infarction is conflicting. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of morphine administration, on infarct size and reperfusion injury assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) in a large multicenter ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) population. In total, 734 STEMI patients reperfused by primary percutaneous coronary intervention <12 h after symptom onset underwent CMR imaging at eight centers for assessment of myocardial damage. Intravenous morphine administration was recorded in all patients. CMR was completed within one week after infarction using a standardized protocol. The clinical endpoint of the study was the occurrence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) within 12 months after infarction. Intravenous morphine was administered in 61.8% (n = 454) of all patients. There were no differences in infarct size (17%LV, interquartile range [IQR] 8-25%LV versus 16%LV, IQR 8-26%LV, p = 0.67) and microvascular obstruction (p = 0.92) in patients with versus without morphine administration. In the subgroup of patients with early reperfusion within 120 min and reduced flow of the infarcted vessel (TIMI-flow ≤2 before PCI) morphine administration resulted in significantly smaller infarcts (12%LV, IQR 12-19 versus 19%LV, IQR 10-29, p = 0.035) and reduced microvascular obstruction (p = 0.003). Morphine administration had no effect on hard clinical endpoints (log-rank test p = 0.74) and was not an independent predictor of clinical outcome in Cox regression analysis. In our large multicenter CMR study, morphine administration did not have a negative effect on myocardial damage or clinical prognosis in acute reperfused STEMI. In patients, presenting early ( ≤120 min) morphine may have a cardioprotective effect as reflected by smaller infarcts; but this finding has to be assessed in further well-designed clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: CMR; ST-elevation myocardial infarction; infarct size; morphine; reperfusion
Year: 2020 PMID: 32182847 PMCID: PMC7141264 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9030735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Patient Characteristics.
| Variable | Total Study | Morphine + | Morphine − | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 62 (51–71) | 61 (51–70) | 66 (52–72) | 0.03 | |
| Male sex: | 555/734 (76%) | 356/454 (78%) | 199/280 (71%) | 0.02 | |
| Cardiovascular risk factors: | |||||
| Current smoking | 316/670 (47%) | 207/415 (50%) | 109/255 (43%) | 0.07 | |
| Hypertension | 488/731 (67%) | 287/452 (64%) | 201/279 (72%) | 0.02 | |
| Hypercholesterolemia | 258/727 (36%) | 156/450 (34%) | 102/277 (37%) | 0.55 | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 146/731 (20%) | 76/453 (17%) | 70/278 (25%) | 0.01 | |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 27.3 (24.8–30.1) | 27.5 (25.0–30.2) | 27.0 (24.6–30.1) | 0.31 | |
| Anterior infarction: | 343/702 (51%) | 215/439 (49%) | 128/263 (49%) | 0.94 | |
| Heart-rate (min) | 76 (67–87) | 76 (66–86) | 77 (70–88) | 0.19 | |
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 130 (117–147) | 130 (116–145) | 134 (119–150) | 0.42 | |
| Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 80 (70–88) | 80 (70–86) | 80 (70–90) | 0.82 | |
| Times (min) | |||||
| Symptom onset to PCI hospital admission | 180 (109–315) | 165 (100–276) | 200 (123–404) | <0.001 | |
| Door-to-balloon-time | 30 (22–42) | 30 (21–40) | 30 (23–45) | 0.67 | |
| Killip-class on admission: | 0.59 | ||||
| 1 | 650/734 (89%) | 405/454 (89%) | 245/280 (88%) | ||
| 2 | 50/734 (7%) | 28/454 (6%) | 22/280 (8%) | ||
| 3 | 17/734 (2%) | 9/454 (2%) | 8/280 (3%) | ||
| 4 | 17/734 (2%) | 12/454 (3%) | 5/280 (2%) | ||
| Number of diseased vessels: | 0.76 | ||||
| 1 | 398/734 (54%) | 251/454 (55%) | 147/ 280 (53%) | ||
| 2 | 206/734 (28%) | 125/454 (28%) | 81/280 (29%) | ||
| 3 | 130/734 (18%) | 78/454 (17%) | 52/280 (19%) | ||
| Infarct related artery: | 0.69 | ||||
| Left anterior descending | 328/734 (45%) | 199/454 (44%) | 129/280 (46%) | ||
| Left circumflex | 89/734 (12%) | 56/454 (12%) | 33/280 (12%) | ||
| Right coronary | 314/734 (43%) | 198/454 (44%) | 116/280 (41%) | ||
| Left main | 3/734 (0%) | 1/454 (0%) | 2/280 (1%) | ||
| TIMI-flow before PCI: | 0.47 | ||||
| TIMI-flow 0 | 412/734 (56%) | 246/454 (54%) | 166/280 (59%) | ||
| TIMI-flow I | 97/734 (13%) | 66/454 (15%) | 31/280 (11%) | ||
| TIMI-flow II | 119/734 (16%) | 75/454 (16%) | 44/280 (16%) | ||
| TIMI-flow III | 106/734 (14%) | 67/454 (15%) | 39/280 (14%) | ||
| Thrombectomy: | 111/454 (24%) | 111/454 (24%) | 68/280 (24%) | 0.96 | |
| TIMI-flow post PCI: | 0.17 | ||||
| TIMI-flow 0 | 11/734 (1%) | 7/454 (1%) | 4/280 (1%) | ||
| TIMI-flow I | 19/734 (3%) | 13/ 454 (3%) | 6/280 (2%) | ||
| TIMI-flow II | 56/734 (8%) | 27/454 (6%) | 29/280 (10%) | ||
| TIMI-flow III | 648/734 (88%) | 407/454 (90%) | 93/280 (86%) | ||
| Peak CK (µmol/l*s) | 26 (12–46) | 27 (13–48) | 26 (10–43) | 0.28 | |
| ST-segment resolution (%) | 55 (23–78) | 58 (25–79) | 51 (20–77) | 0.12 | |
| Concomitant medications: | |||||
| ß-blockers | 703/732 (96%) | 433/453 (96%) | 270/279 (97%) | 0.43 | |
| ACE-inhibitors/AT-1-antagonist | 698/732 (95%) | 433/453 (96%) | 265/279 (95%) | 0.71 | |
| Aspirin | 734/734 (100%) | 454 /454 (100%) | 280 /280 (100%) | 1 | |
| Clopidogrel, prasugrel or both | 734/734 (100%) | 454 /454 (100%) | 280 /280 (100%) | 1 | |
| Statins | 699/732 (96%) | 435/453 (96%) | 264/279 (95%) | 0.37 | |
| Aldosterone antagonist | 88/732 (12%) | 51/453 (11%) | 37/279 (14%) | 0.42 | |
| Completion of abciximab infusion | 688/733 (94%) | 429/453 (95%) | 259/280 (93%) | 0.94 | |
Continuous data are presented as median and interquartile range. ACE = angiotensin-converting enzyme, AT-1 = angiotensin1, BMI = body mass index, CMR = cardiac magnetic resonance, CK = creatine kinase, PCI = primary percutaneous coronary intervention, TIMI = thrombolysis in myocardial infarction.
Figure 1Study Flow. This study was a predefined sub-study of the AIDA STEMI trial (Abciximab Intracoronary Versus Intravenously Drug Application in STEMI). CMR = cardiac magnetic resonance, LGE = late gadolinium enhancement.
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance results.
| Characteristic | Total Study | Morphine + | Morphine − |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Area at risk (edema) (%LV) | 35 (25–48) | 36 (25–48) | 35 (27–48) | 0.72 |
| Infarct size (%LV) | 17 (8–25) | 16 (8–26) | 17 (9–24) | 0.67 |
| Myocardial salvage (%LV) | 17 (9–27) | 17 (9–26) | 17 (8–27) | 0.45 |
| Myocardial salvage index | 51 (33–69) | 51 (32–69) | 52 (35–69) | 0.65 |
| Late MO (%LV) | 0.0 (0.0–1.8) | 0.0 (0.0–1.8) | 0.0 (0.0 – 1.9) | 0.92 |
| LV ejection fraction (%) | 51 (44–58) | 51 (44–58) | 50 (43–58) | 0.71 |
| LV end-diastolic volume (mL) | 146 (121–171) | 145 (124–174) | 141 (112–166) | 0.004 |
| LV end-systolic volume (mL) | 72 (54–91) | 72 (55–93) | 71 (52–88) | 0.18 |
Continuous data are presented as median and interquartile range. CMR = cardiac magnetic resonance, LV = left ventricular, MO = microvascular obstruction.
Figure 2Infarct size in subgroup of patients with reperfusion within 120 min/2 h and TIMI-flow ≤2 before PCI. Observed a significantly reduced infarct size in the group of patients with morphine administration (p = 0.035).
Figure 3Microvascular obstruction in subgroup of patients with reperfusion within 120 min/2 h and TIMI-flow ≤2 before PCI. Observed a significantly smaller area of microvascular obstruction in the group of patients additionally treated with morphine (p = 0.003).
Figure 4Twelve-month survival according to morphine use. Kaplan–Meier plots with log-rank testing for event-free survival at the 12-month follow-up. There were no significant differences between the two groups (Log-rank test p = 0.74).