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Temporal trends in clinical outcomes after percutaneous coronary intervention: a systematic review of 66,327 patients from 25 all-comers trials

Taku Asano, Masafumi Ono, Zhehao Dai, Akira Saito, Takayoshi Kanie, Yoshimitsu Takaoka, Atsushi Mizuno, Daisuke Yoneoka, Nobuyuki Komiyama

2022EuroIntervention32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: With the improvements of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) technology and post-PCI patient management, several registry studies reported temporal trends in post-PCI clinical outcomes. However, their results are inconclusive, potentially reflecting region-specific trends, based on site-reported events without external validity. AIMS: This study aimed to investigate temporal trends in post-PCI clinical outcomes in all-comers randomised controlled trials (RCTs) involving coronary stents. METHODS: We performed a systematic review identifying RCTs comparing a clinical outcome as a primary endpoint among different coronary stents with an all-comers design and independent clinical event adjudication, extracting the study start year, patient baseline characteristics, and one- and five-year clinical outcomes. Temporal trends in clinical outcomes (cardiac death, myocardial infarction [MI], target lesion revascularisation [TLR], stent thrombosis [ST]) were assessed using random-effects meta-regression analyses, estimating the relationship between clinical outcomes and study start year. RESULTS: Overall, 25 all-comers trials (51 device arms, 66,327 patients) conducted between 2003 and 2018 fulfilled the eligibility criteria. Random-effects meta-regression analysis revealed significant decreasing trends in one- and five-year cardiac death, one-year TLR, and five-year ST incidences (relative risk per 10-year increase: 0.69 [0.51-0.92], 0.66 [0.44-0.98], 0.60 [0.41-0.88], and 0.18 [0.07-0.44], respectively). There was no significant trend in myocardial infarction incidences. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first attempt to clarify and quantify the temporal trends of post-PCI outcome incidence. The 15-year improvements in PCI therapy and post-therapeutic patient management are associated with reduced incidences of cardiac death and PCI-related adverse events.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineConventional PCIPercutaneous coronary interventionIntensive care medicineAdverse effectPercutaneousMEDLINEClinical trialEmergency medicineOutcome (game theory)Interventional cardiologyInternal medicineCardiologyCoronary heart diseaseRisk assessmentCoronary angiographyCardiovascular eventAcute coronary syndromeMedical emergencyAcute Myocardial Infarction ResearchCoronary Interventions and DiagnosticsAntiplatelet Therapy and Cardiovascular Diseases