Prospective, randomized evaluation of thrombectomy prior to percutaneous intervention in diseased saphenous vein grafts and thrombus-containing coronary arteries.

Publication/Presentation Date

12-3-2003

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We sought to determine whether routine thrombectomy prior to stent implantation in diseased saphenous vein grafts (SVGs) and thrombus-containing native coronary arteries would reduce peri-procedural myonecrosis and subsequently enhance event-free survival.

BACKGROUND: Percutaneous coronary intervention in diseased SVGs and thrombotic native coronary arteries is complicated by a high rate of peri-procedural myocardial infarction (MI). Thrombectomy prior to intervention may enhance the safety of intervention and improve early and late outcomes in these high-risk patients.

METHODS: At 60 centers in the U.S. and Canada, 797 patients with 839 diseased SVGs or thrombus-containing native coronary arteries were prospectively randomized to stent implantation with versus without prior thrombectomy with the X-SIZER device (ev3, Plymouth, Minnesota).

RESULTS: Peri-procedural MI occurred in 15.8% of patients assigned to the X-SIZER device compared with 16.6% of control patients (p = 0.77), although the rate of large MI (pre-specified as the development of new pathologic Q waves or creatine phosphokinase-MB isoenzyme elevation >8 x upper limits of normal) was reduced with X-SIZER device use from 9.6% to 5.5% (multivariate risk ratio 0.35 [95% confidence interval 0.18 to 0.66], p = 0.002). Major adverse cardiac events (cardiac death, MI, or repeat target vessel revascularization) occurred in 16.8% of X-SIZER patients versus 17.1% of control patients at 30 days (p = 0.92), and in 31.3% of X-SIZER patients versus 28.2% of control patients at 1 year (p = 0.35).

CONCLUSIONS: Thrombectomy with the X-SIZER device prior to stent implantation in high-risk diseased SVGs and thrombus-containing native coronary arteries may reduce the extent, but not the occurrence, of myonecrosis. Early and late event-free survival, however, were not improved by routine thrombectomy with this device.

Volume

42

Issue

11

First Page

2007

Last Page

2013

ISSN

0735-1097

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

14662267

Department(s)

Department of Medicine

Document Type

Article

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