Akademska digitalna zbirka SLovenije - logo
E-viri
Celotno besedilo
Recenzirano Odprti dostop
  • Ischemia-guided vs routine ...
    Karthikeyan, Ganesan; Peix, Amalia; Devasenapathy, Niveditha; Jimenez-Heffernan, Amelia; Haque, Saif-ul; Rodella, Carlo; Giubbini, Raffaele; Rosas, Erick Alexanderson; Ozkan, Elgin; Keng, Yung Jih Felix; Vitola, João; Sobic-Saranovic, Dragana; Soni, Manoj; López, Leonardo; Cabrera, Lázaro O.; Camacho-Freire, Santiago; Manovel-Sanchez, Ana; Naeem, Hesham; Fatima, Shazia; Rinaldi, Roberto; Carvajal-Juarez, Isabel; Esenboga, Kerim; Dondi, Maurizio; Paez, Diana

    Journal of nuclear cardiology, 06/2023, Letnik: 30, Številka: 3
    Journal Article

    In patients with multi-vessel disease presenting with ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), the efficacy and safety of ischemia-guided, vs routine non-culprit vessel angioplasty has not been adequately studied. We conducted an international, randomized, non-inferiority trial comparing ischemia-guided non-culprit vessel angioplasty to routine non-culprit vessel angioplasty, following primary PCI for STEMI. The primary outcome was the between-group difference in percent ischemic myocardium at follow-up stress MPI. All MPI images were processed and analyzed at a central core lab, blinded to treatment allocation. In all, 109 patients were enrolled from nine countries. In the ischemia-guided arm, 25/48 (47%) patients underwent non-culprit vessel PCI following stress MPI. In the routine non-culprit PCI arm, 43/56 (77%) patients underwent angioplasty (86% within 6 weeks of randomization). The median percentage of ischemic myocardium on follow-up imaging (mean 16.5 months) was low, and identical (2.9%) in both arms (difference 0.13%, 95%CI − 1.3%–1.6%, P < .0001; non-inferiority margin 5%). A strategy of ischemia-guided non-culprit PCI resulted in low ischemia burden, and was non-inferior to a strategy of routine non-culprit vessel PCI in reducing ischemia burden. Selective non-culprit PCI following STEMI offers the potential for cost-savings, and may be particularly relevant to low-resource settings. (CTRI/2018/08/015384).