Impact of total ischemic time on manual thrombus aspiration benefit during primary percutaneous coronary intervention
Sarah Hugelshofer, Marco Roffi, Fabienne Witassek, Franz R Eberli, Thomas Pilgrim, Giovanni Pedrazzini, Hans Rickli, Dragana Radovanovic, Paul Erne, Sophie Degrauwe, Olivier Muller, Pier Giorgio Masci, Stephan Windecker & Juan F Iglesias
abstract
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BACKGROUND
The benefits of manual thrombus aspiration (TA) during primary
percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) for ST-elevation
myocardial infarction (STEMI) remain uncertain. We assessed the
influence of total ischemic time (TIT) on clinical outcomes among
STEMI patients undergoing manual TA during pPCI.
METHODS AND RESULTS
We conducted a retrospective study of patients enrolled in the Acute
Myocardial Infarction in Switzerland Plus registry. STEMI patients
undergoing pPCI with (TA group) or without (PCI-alone group) manual
TA were stratified based on short (<3 hours), intermediate (3-6
hours), and long (>6 hours) TIT. The primary endpoint was
in-hospital all-cause mortality. The secondary endpoint was
in-hospital major adverse cardiac events (MACE), a composite of
all-cause death, myocardial reinfarction and stroke. Between 2008
and 2014, 4'154 patients (TA 48%) were included. Risk-adjusted
in-hospital all-cause mortality was not different between TA and
PCI-alone groups (OR 1.29; 95%CI 0.83-1.98; p=0.26), whereas there
was significantly increased risk of MACE (OR 1.52; 95%CI 1.05-2.19;
p=0.03) in patients treated with manual TA compared with PCI-alone.
There was no significant difference between manual TA and PCI-alone
with respect to risk-adjusted all-cause mortality according to TIT
groups, but risk-adjusted MACE rates were significantly higher in
the group of patients with long TIT treated with manual TA compared
with PCI-alone (OR 2.42; 95%CI 1.16-5.04; p=0.02).
CONCLUSION
In a large registry of STEMI patients, manual TA was not associated
with lower risk-adjusted in-hospital all-cause mortality compared
with PCI-alone regardless of TIT but was associated with
significantly greater risk of MACE. In patients with prolonged TIT,
manual TA was associated with higher risk-adjusted MACE rates
compared with PCI-alone.
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citation
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Hugelshofer S, Roffi M, Witassek F, Eberli F R, Pilgrim T,
Pedrazzini G, Rickli H, Radovanovic D, Erne P, Degrauwe S, Muller O,
Masci P G, Windecker S, Iglesias J F. Impact of total ischemic time
on manual thrombus aspiration benefit during primary percutaneous
coronary intervention. Am Heart J 2018; 204:34-42.
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type
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journal paper/review (English)
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date of publishing
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10-07-2018
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journal title
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Am Heart J (204)
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ISSN electronic
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1097-6744
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pages
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34-42
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PubMed
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30075324
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DOI
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10.1016/j.ahj.2018.05.019
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