| Literature DB >> 35329835 |
Andreas Schäfer1, Muharrem Akin1, Johanna Diekmann2, Tobias König1.
Abstract
Optimal medical therapy for secondary prevention following acute myocardial infarction reduces non-fatal ischaemic events. Intensive antithrombotic or lipid-lowering approaches have failed to significantly lower mortality. In the past, reduction of infarct size in patients undergoing primary percutaneous revascularisation for acute myocardial infarction had been considered as a surrogate outcome marker. However, infarct size measured by magnetic resonance imaging or SPECT is strongly associated with all-cause mortality and hospitalization for heart failure within the first year after an acute myocardial infarction. Intracoronary administration of super-saturated oxygen (SSO2) immediately after revascularisation is an approach that can be used to reduce infarct size and, therefore, improve cardiovascular outcome in patients with acute myocardial infarction. In this article, we describe the modulation of pathophysiology by SSO2, review the existing trial data and present our first impressions with the technique in real clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: acute myocardial infarction; infarct size; primary PCI; secondary prevention; super-saturated oxygen
Year: 2022 PMID: 35329835 PMCID: PMC8949147 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11061509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Previous therapeutic strategies to reduce infarct size, which were successful in experimental models but failed in clinical trials.
| Principle to Reduce | Therapies Tested |
|---|---|
| Endogenours | Several studies on post- or remote ischemic conditioning, small study on cyclosporine, negative multicentre study for PKC inhibitor, negative trials for intracoronary adenosine. |
| Reduction of coronary thrombus burden | Mechanical removal of thrombus by routine aspiration, small-molecule glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors improving coronary flow with varying data on infarct size. Abciximab reducing transmurality of infarction, potentially reducing infarct size compared to thrombectomy or eptifibatide, less new-onset heart failure. |
| Mechanical protection | Intra-aortic balloon pump without benefit on infarct size. |
| Slowing metabolism | Intravenous and endovascular cooling indicating a potential in small series, but rapid cooling prior to reperfusion yet not successful in larger trials. |
| Pharmacological | Agents tested include erythropoietin, glucose-insulin-potassium infusion, statins, several classes of antidiabetic drugs, fibrin-derived peptide, iron chelation, ranolazine, and mitochondria-targeted peptides. |
PKC = protein kinase C.
Clinical trials using hyperoxemic therapy in acute myocardial infarction.
| AMIHOT I | AMIHOT II | IC-HOT | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year of publication | 2007 | 2009 | 2019 |
| Patients (n) | 269 | 301 | 100 |
| Location of MI | Anterior or | Anterior | Anterior |
| Symptom onset | ≤24 h | ≤6 h | ≤6 h |
| Reperfusion coronary artery | Proximal infarct- | Proximal LAD | Left-main |
| Duration of SSO2 | 90 min (87%), | ≥90 min (85%), | ≥60 min (94%), |
LAD = Left anterior descending.
Clinical findings from three randomized trials using SSO2.
| AMIHOT I | AMIHOT II | AMIHOT I+II | IC-HOT | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | SSO2 | Control | SSO2 | Control | SSO2 | SSO2 | |
| Patients (n) | 135 | 134 | 79 | 222 | 124 | 258 | 100 |
| 30-day MACE | 7 (5.2%) | 9 (6.7%) | 3 (3.8%) * | 12 (5.4%) * | - | - | 1 (1.0%) |
| Infarct size for anterior AMI | 23.0 (5.0; 37.0) | 9.0 (0; 30.0) | 26.5 (8.5; 44.0) | 20.0 (6.0; 37.0) | 25.0 (7.0; 42.0) | 18.5 (3.5; 34.5) | 19.4 (8.8; 28.9) |
| Infarct size for LV-EF < 40% | 30 ± 26 | 20 ± 30 | 33.5 (17.5; 38.5) | 23.5 (7.5; 38.5) | - | - | - |
* in the per-protocol population MACE rate was 3.8% in both groups; Infarct sizes are reported as mean ± SD or median (interquartile ranges) as originally reported. Infarct sizes were determined by 99mTc-sestamibi SPECT in AMIHOT studies and by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in IC-HOT.