| Literature DB >> 34002203 |
Eliano P Navarese1,2,3, Alexandra J Lansky4, Dean J Kereiakes5, Jacek Kubica1,3, Paul A Gurbel6, Diana A Gorog7,8, Marco Valgimigli9, Nick Curzen10,11, David E Kandzari12, Marc P Bonaca13, Marc Brouwer14, Julia Umińska15, Milosz J Jaguszewski16, Paolo Raggi2, Ron Waksman17, Martin B Leon18,19, William Wijns20, Felicita Andreotti21,22.
Abstract
AIMS: The value of elective coronary revascularisation plus medical therapy over medical therapy alone in managing stable patients with coronary artery disease is debated. We reviewed all trials comparing the two strategies in this population. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Coronary; Elective; Medical therapy; Meta-analysis; Randomised trials; Revascularisation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34002203 PMCID: PMC8669551 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehab246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
Figure 2(A) Rate ratios and 95% confidence intervals for cardiac mortality with revascularisation plus medical therapy vs. medical therapy alone. Size of data markers is proportional to weight in meta-analysis. CI, confidence interval; MT, medical therapy; P-Y, person-years; RR, rate ratio. (B) Meta-analyses for cardiac death and spontaneous myocardial infarction excluding studies enrolling only post-acute coronary syndrome patients, chronic total occlusions, and use of coronary artery bypass grafting >30% in the revascularisation plus medical therapy arm. ACS, acute coronary syndrome; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; CI, confidence interval; CTO, chronic total occlusion; MT, medical therapy; P-Y, person-years; RR, rate ratio. (C) Meta-regression of rate ratios for cardiac mortality with revascularisation plus medical therapy vs. medical therapy alone in relation to follow-up duration. Size of data markers is proportional to size of trial. The solid line represents the meta-regression slope of the change in cardiac death rate ratio for revascularisation plus medical therapy vs. medical therapy alone with increasing length of follow-up. Rate ratios lower than 1 indicate cardiac death reduction with revascularisation. RR, rate ratio; MT, medical therapy.
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Key qualifying event | Number of participants | Strategy | Mean age at onset (years) | Years of follow-up | Crossover from MT to revascularisation (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACIP | Asymptomatic positive stress test and ≥1 major coronary artery ≥50% stenosis at angiography | 558 | PCI/CABG vs. MT | 61.2 | 2 | 29 |
| ACME-1 | Men with stable angina, positive stress test, or MI within 3 months, 70–99% single-vessel coronary stenosis at angiography | 227 | PCI vs. MT | 62.5 | 3 | 57 |
| ACME-2 | Men with stable angina, positive stress test, or MI within 3 months, 70–99% double-vessel coronary stenosis at angiography | 101 | PCI vs. MT | NR | 5 | 54 |
| AVERT | Negative stress test and ≥50% coronary stenosis at angiography | 341 | PCI vs. MT | 58.5 | 1.5 | 11 |
| BARI 2D | Angina, diabetes, and ≥50% coronary stenosis at angiography | 2368 | PCI/CABG vs. MT | 62.4 | 5 | 42 |
| CASS | Positive ECG or stress test and ≥70% coronary stenosis at angiography | 780 | CABG vs. MT | 51.0 | 10 | 40 |
| COURAGE | Positive ECG or stress test and ≥70% coronary stenosis at angiography | 2287 | PCI vs. MT | 61.7 | 4.6 | 31 |
| DECISION-CTO | Angina or silent ischaemia and 100% coronary stenosis at angiography | 815 | PCI vs. MT | 62.6 | 4 | 11 |
| DEFER | ≥50% coronary stenosis at angiography with FFR ≥0.75 and no ischaemia on stress test | 181 | PCI vs. MT | 61.0 | 15 | 43 |
| ECSS | Angina and at least two-vessel ≥50% coronary stenosis at angiography | 767 | CABG vs. MT | 50.0 | 12 | 36 |
| EURO-CTO | Angina and 100% coronary stenosis at angiography | 396 | PCI vs. MT | 65.0 | 3 | 18 |
| FAME-2 | Stable angina or documented silent ischaemia and ≥50% coronary stenosis at angiography | 888 | PCI vs. MT | 63.7 | 5 | 51 |
| INSPIRE | Recent MI and large total (≥20%) and ischaemic (≥10%) adenosine-induced left ventricular perfusion defects | 205 | PCI vs. MT | 63.5 | 1 | NR |
| ISCHEMIA | Moderate or severe ischaemia on non-invasive stress testing and eGFR ≥30 mL/min/1.73 m2 | 5179 | PCI/CABG vs. MT | 64.0 | 3.2 | 21 |
| ISCHEMIA-CKD | Moderate or severe ischaemia and eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73 m2 or on dialysis | 777 | PCI/CABG vs. MT | 62.7 | 2.2 | 20 |
| JSAP | Positive ECG or other stress test and ≥75% coronary stenosis at angiography (≥60% on quantitative angiography) | 384 | PCI vs. MT | 64.4 | 3.3 | 37 |
| MASS-I | ≥80% single-vessel coronary stenosis at angiography | 214 | PCI/CABG vs. MT | 57.0 | 5 | 17 |
| MASS-II | Positive stress test or angina and ≥70% proximal multivessel coronary stenosis at angiography | 611 | PCI/CABG vs. MT | 60.0 | 10 | 39 |
| Mathur | Men with chronic angina despite | 116 | CABG vs. MT | NR | 5.5 | 13 |
| ORBITA | Angina and ≥70% single-vessel coronary stenosis at angiography | 200 | PCI vs. MT | 66.0 | 0.115 | 0 |
| REVASC | Angina and/or positive functional test with 100% coronary stenosis at angiography | 205 | PCI vs. MT | 66.5 | 1 | 17 |
| RITA-2 | Angina and ≥50% in two views or ≥70% in one view coronary stenosis at angiography | 1018 | PCI vs. MT | 58.0 | 7 | 35 |
| SWISSI-II | MI within 3 months, positive stress test (without chest pain) and 1–2 vessel coronary stenosis at angiography | 201 | PCI vs. MT | 55.3 | 10 | 44 |
| TIME | Age | 301 | PCI vs. MT | 80.0 | 3.1 | 45 |
| VA | Chronic angina, positive ECG or other stress test and ≥1 major coronary artery ≥50% stenosis at angiography | 686 | CABG vs. MT | NR | 22 | 66 |
ACIP, Asymptomatic Cardiac Ischaemia Pilot; ACME-1, Angioplasty Compared to MEdicine for single-vessel disease; ACME-2, Angioplasty Compared to MEdicine for double-vessel disease; AVERT, Atorvastatin VErsus Revascularisation Treatment; BARI 2D, Bypass Angioplasty Revascularisation Investigation 2 Diabetes; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; CASS, Coronary Artery Surgery Study; CCS, Canadian Cardiovascular Society; COURAGE, Clinical Outcomes Utilizing Revascularisation and AGgressive drug Evaluation; DECISION-CTO, Randomised Trial Evaluating Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for the Treatment of Chronic Total Occlusion; DEFER, Fractional Flow Reserve to Determine the Appropriateness of Angioplasty in Moderate Coronary Stenosis; ECG, electrocardiogram; ECSS, European Coronary Surgery Study; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; EURO-CTO, A randomised multicentre trial to compare revascularisation with optimal medical therapy for the treatment of chronic total coronary occlusions; FAME 2, Fractional flow reserve vs. Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation 2; FFR, fractional flow reserve; INSPIRE, Adenosine Sestamibi Post-Infarction Evaluation; ISCHEMIA, International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness with Medical and Invasive Approaches trial; ISCHEMIA-CKD, International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness with Medical and Invasive Approaches-Chronic Kidney Disease trial; JSAP, Japanese Stable Angina Pectoris study; MASS, Medicine, Angioplasty, or Surgery Study; MI, myocardial infarction; MT, medical therapy; NR, not reported; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; REVASC, A Randomised Trial to Assess Regional Left Ventricular Function After Stent Implantation in Chronic Total Occlusion; RITA-2, Second Randomised Intervention Treatment of Angina; SWISSI II, Swiss Interventional Study on Silent ischaemia Type II; TIME, Trial of Invasive vs. Medical therapy in Elderly patients; VA, Veterans Administration Cooperative Study. For each study the first reference corresponds to the longest available follow-up.