Home Latest Videos CME Business of Medicine
Doc Life Doc Rant Doc Humor Dueling Doctors
Reuters Health • The Doctor's Channel Daily Newscast
 
Email:

Remember Me

Password:
Trouble Logging In?

ACG San Antonio Collection

Allergy & Clinical Immunology

Alternative Medicine

AMA Chicago Collection

Anesthesiology

Arthritis

Best Practice Series: Atherosclerosis

Best Practice Series: Bipolar Disorder

Best Practice Series: Epilepsy

Best Practice Series: Heart Failure

Best Practice Series: Major Depression

Best Practice Series: Type 2 Diabetes

Business of Medicine

Cardiology

Cardiology: Interventional

Cardiology: Non-Interventional

CDC Convergence 2010

Critical Care

DDW 2010 Conference Collection

Dentistry

Dermatology

Diabetes

Doc Humor

Doc Rant

Emergency Medicine

Endocrinology

Family Medicine

Gastroenterology

Gastroenterology: IBD

Haiti Collection - Reports from Leogane

Hematology-Oncology

HIV/AIDS

Hospitalist

Human Interest

Infectious Diseases

Internal Medicine

Medical Informatics

Medical Students

Nephrology

Neurology & Neurosurgery

Nurses/NP/PA

Ob/Gyn

Oncology

Ophthalmology

Orthopaedics

Otolaryngology

Pain Management

Pathology & Lab Medicine

Patient Education

Pediatrics

Pharma Film Festival

Pharmacists

Professional Development

Psychiatry & Mental Health

Public Health & Prevention

Pulmonary Medicine

Radiology

Reuters Health • The Doctor's Channel Daily Newscast

Rheumatology

Sexual Medicine

SHM 2010 Conference Coverage

Sleep Medicine

Surgery

Transplantation

Travel Medicine

Urology

Vancouver 2010 Collection

Veterinary Medicine

Video Job Finder

Women’s Health

 
  Cardiology
In diabetics, revascularization more likely after PCI vs CABG
Reuters Health • The Doctor's Channel Daily Newscast
Alternate HTML content should be placed here. This content requires the Macromedia Flash Player. Get Flash

Sponsored by The Doctor's Channel 

Rating:  
0 ratings
Views: 4,146 Video Length: 01:44

More in

Cardiology

Cardiology: Interventional

Critical Care

Diabetes

Emergency Medicine

Endocrinology

Family Medicine

Internal Medicine

Medical Students

Nurses/NP/PA

Reuters Health • The Doctor's Channel Daily Newscast

Posted: February 8, 2010
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - For patients with diabetes and complex multivessel coronary artery disease, the risk of repeat vascularization within one year is elevated 3-fold after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) compared with surgery, according to a subgroup analysis from the multinational SYNTAX study.

Otherwise, rates of serious outcomes at 12 months in diabetic patients were similar after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and PCI with the Taxus Express paclitaxel-eluting stents.

The SYNTAX study was the first to compare CABG and PCI with Taxus for complex left main and/or 3-vessel disease in both diabetic and nondiabetic patients, Dr. Adrian P. Banning and co-authors note in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology for March 16.

The trial evaluated major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events in 1800 patients, with a piori stratification based on the presence or absence of medically treated diabetes and left main disease The CABG group consisted of 897 subjects overall (676 nondiabetics, 221 with diabetes), and the PCI group contained 903 subjects (672 nondiabetics, 231 with diabetes). Only patients taking oral antiglycemics or insulin were classified as diabetics; patients controlling the disease by diet only were included in the nondiabetic group.

The primary SYNTAX endpoint – a composite of death, stroke, and myocardial infarction -- was not met in the subgroup analyses. Thus, Dr. Banning, from John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK, and his colleagues say the results are “hypothetical and hypotheses generating only” and “should not necessarily dictate any change in current practice patterns.”

(In the overall SYNTAX analysis, however, patients treated with CABG had much lower rates of major cardiac or cerebrovascular events, or MACCE, at 1 year than those managed with PCI. See Reuters Health story posted February 18, 2009.)

In analyses restricted to diabetic patients, not only was there no difference between the CABG and PCI groups in rates of MACCE, but there was also no difference in rates of symptomatic graft occlusion or stent thrombosis.

There were, however, significantly higher rates of repeat revascularization with PCI in both diabetics (6.4% after CABG vs 20.3% after PCI, relative risk 3.18) and nondiabetics (5.7% vs 11.1%, respectively, RR = 1.94). The difference between diabetics and nondiabetics in the PCI group was significant.

Overall, the number needed to treat by CABG to avoid 1 major adverse cardiac or cerebrovascular event (driven primarily by repeat revascularization) was 9 for patients with diabetes and 31 for nondiabetic patients.

The researchers note that aggressive progression of diffuse disease in diabetics is likely to have a greater impact in the stented cohort versus the CABG group, in which distal grafts minimize disease progression in upstream proximal vessels.

They caution, however, that due to the complexity of participants’ coronary artery disease, these results should not be generalized to all patients with diabetes. Also, these results are early, with follow-up planned for 5 years.

They conclude, “These exploratory results may extend the evidence base” for paclitaxel-eluting stents in selected diabetic and nondiabetic patients with left main and/or 3-vessel disease.

In an editorial, Dr. Harold L. Dauerman, from the University of Vermont in Burlington, states, “At 1 year, there is no death penalty associated with multivessel PCI” in patients with diabetes, though that doesn’t preclude its appearance with longer follow-up.

However, he adds, “The use of (drug-eluting stents) fails to turn diabetic patients into nondiabetic patients,” given the higher risk of repeat revascularization with PCI.

He concludes that multivessel PCI is a viable general option for diabetics, while warning that PCI without drug-eluting stents has been shown to increase mortality and should not be avoided.

Reference:
J Am Coll Cardiol 2010.
Comments & Responses
 
Would you like to comment?
Join The Doctor's Channel for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.
Videos in Cardiology

CABG Best for Multivessel CAD

3745 Views

Cardiac Resynchronization in Heart Failure

235 Views

Low- vs High-Dose Antiplatelet Therapy for ACS

2657 Views

Ivabradine for CHF

3580 Views

Reduced Heparin During PCI

1168 Views

Ticagrelor Pharmacogentetics

321 Views

Clopidogrel and Concurrent PPI Use

1559 Views

IV Fluid Unmasks PFOs on Echo

10779 Views

Same-Day Discharge Fine for Eligible PCI Patients

2392 Views

ARBs Do Not Cause Post-op Atrial Fibrillation

12566 Views

Bivalirudin Reduces Mortality in High-Risk STEMI

5126 Views

Post-Operative Thyroid Treatment Not Beneficial

2572 Views

Furesomide Dose Predicts Heart Failure Prognosis

14730 Views

Residual CVD Risk Analyzed After LDL Lowered

4657 Views

Clinical Setting Affects Troponin Interpretation

4386 Views

Benefits of candesartan for hypertension and CAD

3015 Views, 1 Comments