Interventional cardiology: successes and failures
ISSUE @ A GLANCE
European Heart Journal (2015) 36, 61–62
doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehu499
Interventional cardiology: successes
and failures
Thomas F. Lüscher
Editor-in-Chief, Zurich Heart House, Careum Campus, Moussonstrasse 4, 8091 Zurich, Switzerland
with restenosis and 484 among those without it [hazard ratio (HR)
1.19; P ¼ 0.03]). The Cox proportional hazards model adjusting for
other variables identified restenosis as an independent correlate of
4-year mortality (HR 1.23; P ¼ 0.02). Other independent correlates
of 4-year mortality were age, diabetes mellitus, current smoking
habit, and left ventricular ejection fraction. Thus, in this large
cohort of patients undergoing coronary stenting, restenosis was a
strong independent predictor of 4-year mortality.
The second paper ‘Fractional flow reserve vs. angiography
in guiding management to optimize outcomes in nonST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: the British
Heart Foundation FAMOUS-NSTEMI randomized trial’ by
Colin Berry et al. fron the University of Glasgow9 which is accompanied by a thought-provoking Editorial by Bernard De Bruyne from
Aalst, Belgium10 and an EHJ Today video11 is another FAST TRACK
paper presented at the Hotline session of the Annual Congress of
the European Society of Cardiology in Barcelona in September.
The authors randomly assigned 350 non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) patients to fractional flow reserve
(FFR)-guided management or angiography-guided standard care in
six UK hospitals. FFR was measured and disclosed to the operator
in the FFR guided-group, but was not disclosed in the angiographyguided group. FFR ≤0.80 was considered as an indication for PCI
or coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG). FFR disclosure resulted
in a change in treatment between medical therapy, PCI, or CABG
in 21.6% of patients. At 12 months, revascularization and MI
remained 7.8% lower in the FFR-guided group, but major adverse
cardiac events (MACE) excluding procedure-related MI tended
to be higher. Thus, in NSTEMI, angiography-guided management
leads to higher rates of coronary revascularization than FFR-guided
management.
The third paper on the ‘Effect of intravenous TRO40303 as an
adjunct to primary percutaneous coronary intervention
for acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction. MITOCARE
study results’ by Dan Atar et al. from Oslo University12 accompanied by an Editorial by Hans Erik Bøtker13 is also a FAST TRACK manuscript presented at the Hotline session of the Annual Congress of
the European Society of Cardiology in Barcelona in September.
MITOCARE evaluated the efficacy and safety of an i.v. bolus of
TRO40303 for the reduction of reperfusion injury in patients presenting with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) within 6 h
Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. & The Author 2015. For permissions please email: .
Ever since the seminal first balloon angioplasy in a young patient
with angina pectoris on 16 September 1977 by the late Andreas
R. Grüntzig at the University Hospital Zurich,1 interventional cardiology has contributed importantly to the rise of cardiovascular medicine.2 With the advent of drug-eluting stents, restenosis has become
less important,3 but whether or not it affects hard outcomes including
mortality, or represents a clinical nuisance only is still a matter of
debate. Whether we really use percutaneous coronary interventions
(PCIs) only in those patients who truly need it has also been questioned by many critics of current clinical practice.4
Finally, although primary PCI has become the standard of care in
acute coronary syndromes (ACS), the event rate in the years thereafter remains high, particularly due to the development of systolic
dysfunction and heart failure. Thus, the possibility of improving
current ACS management further, for instance by limiting reperfusion injury (thereby protecting the myocardium), is another open
question. Almost all pharmacological interventions have failed,
although pre-conditioning appears to be promising.5
Grüntzig started in coronary circulation, but structural interventions have recently become almost as important. Catheter-based
interventions for aortic stenosis or mitral regurgitation have successfully been introduced in selected patients.6 In contrast, percutaneous
closure of a patent foramen ovale (PFO) in patients with cryptogenic
stroke is an effective procedure and is very controversial. All
these open issues of interventional cardiology are addressed in the
current issue of the European Heart Journal.
The first paper of this issue on ‘Prognostic role of restenosis in
10 004 patients undergoing routine control angiography
after coronary stenting’ by Adnan Kastrati and co-workers7
from the Deutsches Herzzentrum in Munich, is a FAST TRACK
accompanied by an excellent Editorial by Johann Auer from the
General Hospital in Braunau, Austria,8 was presented at the
Hotline session of the Annual Congress of the European Society of
Cardiology in Barcelona in September. The authors investigated
the impact of restenosis on 4-year mortality in 10 004 patients with
15 004 treated lesions undergoing routine control angiography
6–8 months after coronary stenting. Restenosis was defined as
diameter stenosis ≥50% in the in-segment area at follow-up angiography. The primary outcome was 4-year mortality. Restenosis was
present in 26.4% of the patients. Overall, there were 702 deaths
during follow-up. Of these, 218 deaths occurred among patients
62
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