| Literature DB >> 35683500 |
Giulia Masiero1, Francesco Cardaioli1, Giulio Rodinò1, Giuseppe Tarantini1.
Abstract
Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) complicated by cardiogenic shock (CS) is a life-threatening condition frequently encountered in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD). Despite prompt revascularization, in particular, percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and therapeutic and technological advances, the mortality rate for patients with CS related to AMI remains unacceptably high. Differently form a hemodynamically stable setting, a culprit lesion-only (CLO) revascularization strategy is currently suggested for AMI-CS patients, based on the results of recent randomized evidence burdened by several limitations and conflicting results from non-randomized studies. Furthermore, mechanical circulatory support (MCS) devices have emerged as a key therapeutic option in CS, especially in the case of their early implantation without delaying revascularization and before irreversible organ damage has occurred. We provide an in-depth review of the current evidence on optimal revascularization strategies of multivessel CAD in infarct-related CS, assessing the role of different types of MCS devices and highlighting the importance of shock teams and medical care system networks to effectively impact on clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: acute myocardial infarction; cardiogenic shock; left ventricular assist devices; mechanical circulatory support
Year: 2022 PMID: 35683500 PMCID: PMC9180947 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11113116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
SCAI (Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions) stages of cardiogenic shock.
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| At risk for cardiogenic shock (no signs or symptoms). |
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| Clinical evidence of relative hypotension or tachycardia without hypoperfusion (pre-shock). |
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| Hypoperfusion with normal blood pressure or hypotension requiring intervention beyond volume resuscitation (inotropes, vasopressors, or mechanical support). |
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| Extreme hypoperfusion with hypotension or inotropes/vasopressors, failing to respond to initial interventions (similar to stage C and worsening). |
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| End-stage hypoperfusion with hypotension despite multiple interventions (inotropes/vasopressors/mechanical support). |
Overview of the key randomized control trials comparing revascularization strategies in patients with acute myocardial infarction and multivessel disease.
| Trial Name/First Author | Clinical Characteristcs | Sample Size | Arms | Definition of NCL | Endpoints |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PRAMI [ | STEMI | 465 | CVO PCI vs. MV primary PCI | %DS ≥ 50% | 22.9% vs. 9.0% ( |
| CvLPRIT [ | STEMI | 296 | CVO PCI vs. MV primary or | %DS > 70% in 1 view | 21.2% vs. 10.0% ( |
| DANAMI-3-PRIMULTI [ | STEMI | 627 | CVO PCI vs. MV staged PCI | %DS >50% with FFR | 22.0% vs. 13.0% ( |
| SMILE [ | NSTEMI | 542 | Immediate MV PCI vs. MV staged PCI | Not reported | 13.6% vs. 23.2% ( |
| COMPARE-ACUTE [ | STEMI | 885 | CVO PCI vs. MV primary or | %DS ≥ 50% with FFR | 20.5% vs. 7.8% ( |
| CULPRIT SHOCK [ | Acute MI with cardiogenic shock | 686 | CVO PCI vs. MV primary PCI | %DS > 70% | 45.9% vs. 55.4% ( |
| COMPLETE [ | STEMI | 4041 | CVO PCI vs MV PCI either during or after the index hospitalization | %DS > 70% or | 10.5% vs. 7.8% ( |
NCL: non-culprit lesion; %DS, angiographic percentage of diameter stenosis; CVO, culprit vessel-only; FFR, fractional flow reserve; MACCE, major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events; MACE, major adverse cardiac events; MI, myocardial infarction; MV, multivessel; NSTEMI, non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; STEMI, ST segment elevation myocardial infarction. a MACE is a composite of cardiovascular death, non-fatal MI, refractory angina. b MACE is a composite of death, MI, any repeat revascularization and heart failure. c MACE is a composite of death, MI and any repeat revascularization of non-culprit vessel. d MACCE is a composite of cardiac death, MI, rehospitalization for unstable angina, TVR and stroke. e MACCE is a composite of death, MI, any repeat revascularization and cerebrovascular events. f MACE is a composite of death and renal-replacement therapy. g MACE is a composite of cardiovascular death and MI.
Key factors that should be evaluated when choosing the type of mechanical cardiac support to restore proper coronary and end-organ perfusion in case of in infarct-related CS.
| Patient’s Characteristics | Detailed Evaluation | MCS Selection |
|---|---|---|
| Acuity of illness | According to SCAI classification |
Impella: may be used in stages C and D (in case of potentially reversible underlying cause or HT/VAD candidates). ECMO: may be used in stage C–E (especially in case of combined respiratory insufficiency or refractory cardiac arrest). IABP: routine use not recommended (may be limited in case of mechanical complications post-AMI) |
| CS phenotype | Type of cardiac failure |
Impella: Isolated LV failure, biventricular injury without pulmonary failure (in combination with right p-VAD), isolated RV failure (no solid evidence). ECMO: biventricular injury (especially in case of combined respiratory insufficiency or refractory cardiac arrest), isolated RV failure (no solid evidence). IABP: routine use not recommended (may be limited in case of mechanical complications post-AMI) |
| Vascular access anatomy | Ilio-femoral/axillary access suitability |
Impella CP and RP are implanted percutaneously, the larger devices are implanted surgically (according to cannula/sheath diameter) The femoral approach should be preferred A strict adherence to best vascular access and closure practices, familiarity with device troubleshooting and a multidisciplinary approach should be guaranteed. |
CS: cardiogenic shock; SCAI: Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions; HT: heart transplantation; (p) VAD: (percutaneous) ventricular assist device; LV: left ventricle; RV: right ventricle; ECMO: ExtraCorporeal Membrane Oxygenation; IABP: intra-aortic balloon pump; AMI: acute myocardial infarction.
Overview of the available studies investigating the impact of the timing of Impella 2.5/CP insertion and the extent of revascularization on outcomes in patients with AMI complicated by CS and treated with PCI.
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| Tarantini et al. [ | 147 | 17 Italian centers | 2.5/CP | Insertion before PCI ( | Pre-PCI insertion was associated with higher 1-year freedom from all-cause death [HR 0.45, CI (0.21–0.99); |
| Schäfer et al. [ | 166 | 3 German and 1 Danish centers | 2.5/CP | Insertion pre-PCI ( | Pre-PCI insertion was associated with lower 30-day mortality rates (28% vs. 51%, |
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| Aurigemma et al. [ | 152 | 17 Italian centers | 2.5/CP | Pts with BCIS-JS RI < 0.67 vs. Pts with BCIS-JS RI ≥ 0.67 | At 1-year FU, a more extensive revascularization (RI ≥ 0.67) was associated with better survival free of the composite of death, non-fatal MI, and non-fatal stroke ( |
| Lemor et al. [ | 198 | 57 US centers | 2.5/CP | MV-PCI ( | In-hospital survival and rates of AKI were not significantly different between groups (69.8% MV-PCI vs. 65.3% CV-PCI; |
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| Schäfer et al. [ | 202 | 3 German and 1 Italian centers | CP | CR (rSS ≤ 8; | At 30-day FU, mortality was higher with post-PCI insertion (Impella post-PCI: 57%, Impella pre-PCI: 38%, |
AMI; acute myocardial infarction; CS: cardiogenic shock; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; HR: hazard risk; CI: confidence interval; AKI: acute kidney injury; MV: multivessel; MCS: mechanical cardia support; CV: culprit vessel; BCSI-JS: British Cardiovascular Intervention Society myocardial jeopardy score (BCIS-JS); RI: revascularization index; CR: complete revascularization; IR: incomplete revascularization; FU: follow-up; rSS: residual Syntax Score.
Figure 1Current best practice for infarct-related cardiogenic shock patients with multivessel coronary artery disease: optimal revascularization strategies, mechanical cardiac support implantation, and shock teams and medical care system networks implementation. CS: cardiogenic shock; MCS: mechanical cardiac support; CLO: culprit-lesion only; NCL: non-culprit lesion; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention.