The LEADERS FREE study showed that a biolimus A9-coated polymer-free stent was superior to a conventional stent in terms of safety and efficacy in patients who received dual antiplatelet therapy for only a month due to their high risk for bleeding. In this substudy, researchers analyzed 667 patients enrolled in the original LEADERS FREE trial who met certain requirements...
EuroPCR 2018 | Swedish Registry on the SYNERGY DES: tested in primary PCI for the first time
The study included 36292 consecutive patients undergoing acute myocardial infarction receiving PCI with the new generation stent SYNERGY (thin struts, bioresorbable polymer and everolimus eluting); 39.7% presented ST elevation MI. Kaplan-Meier curves at 2 years of patients receiving the SYNERGY vs patients receiving other drug eluting stents resulted very similar for thrombosis (0,69% vs 0,81%,...
EuroPCR 2018 | LeDRA: Left Distal Radial Approach for angiography and angioplasty
The left distal radial artery has been recently proposed as an alternative in selected patients with high success rate and low complications rate. This study evaluated the feasibility and safety of this puncture both for coronary angiography and angioplasty. It included 200 consecutive patients with palpable left distal radial artery punctured by three expert operators....
EuroPCR 2018 | Compare-Acute: FFR or Primary Angioplasty at a 2-Year Follow-Up After Complete Revascularization
Recent studies in patients undergoing acute myocardial infarction showed that a complete revascularization strategy in an acute or subacute setting, whether it be guided through angiography (PRAMI, CvLPRIT) or fractional flow reserve (FFR) (PRIMULTI, COMPARE-ACUTE), improves the combined endpoint of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) when compared with treatment of the culprit artery only. Based...
Restenosis Does Not Seem as Benign as We Thought
Elective, uncomplicated repeat revascularization after stent restenosis is associated with higher mortality rates according to a new meta-analysis that will be published soon in J Am Coll Cardiol Intrv. Historically, interventional cardiologists have seen target lesion revascularization (TLR) as a procedure that “unjustly” increased combined events in clinical studies and our own databases, thus representing...
TAVR with Prior MRS: A New Challenge
The benefits of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) for high-risk, prohibitive-risk (class I) or intermediate-risk (class IIa) patients have already been proven, but there is a growing population of patients with a history of myocardial revascularization surgery (MRS) who experience severe aortic stenosis. Decision-making in these cases is anything but simple, mainly due to the presence of...
ACC 2018 | SECURE-PCI: High Dose of Statins pior PCI Could Help
Patients undergoing acute coronary syndrome (ACS) loaded with a high dose of statins prior diagnostic catheterization do not seem to benefit from this strategy. However, when looking at those undergoing PCI alone (excluding all patients who had received surgery or medical treatment), the benefit appears as a reduction of combined major events. The benefit of atorvastatin loading...
Surgery Seems Superior to Angioplasty in Young Patients
Long-term follow-up of patients under 50 with multivessel coronary artery disease suggests surgery outcomes are significantly better than angioplasty outcomes. This study, presented at the Society of Thoracic Surgeons’ (STS) Annual Meeting, concludes that surgery should continue as plan A when it comes to young patients with three-vessel disease. Surgeons complain that many patients never actually...
Silent Diabetes Is the New Stealthy Enemy
One in three “nondiabetic” patients who undergo angioplasty with current drug-eluting stents have an altered glucose metabolism, which is associated with a 4-fold higher risk of events, according to a study that will be published soon in JACC Intv. One in three patients is definitely one patient too many, and four times higher is definitely...
Keys to Productivity Improvement in the Cath Lab
The systematic reduction of inefficiencies in the catheterization laboratory (such as the improvement of lab room start times and room turnaround times) can definitely improve the productivity of a Department of Interventional Cardiology without forcing its members to stay in the facilities longer. As a matter of fact, work can be finished even faster with...