1. [DIRECT ADMISSION OF STEMI PATIENTS TO THE CARDIAC CARE UNIT VERSUS ADMISSION VIA THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT FOR PRIMARY CORONARY INTERVENTION IMPROVES SHORT AND LONG-TERM SURVIVAL].
- Author
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Meisel SR, Kleiner-Shochat M, Frimerman A, Levy Y, Abu Fanne R, Amsalem N, Bar El M, Hochman O, Ashkar J, Asif A, Mohsen J, Zidan A, Neiman E, Samara H, Kazatsker M, Blondheim DS, and Shotan A
- Subjects
- Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Coronary Care Units, Myocardial Infarction, Patient Admission, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Shortening door-to-balloon time intervals in ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients treated by primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) is necessary in order to limit myocardial damage. Direct admission to the cardiac care unit (CCU) facilitates this goal. We compared characteristics and short- and long-term mortality of PPCI-treated STEMI patients admitted directly to the CCU with those admitted via the emergency department (ED)., Methods: To compare 303 patients admitted directly to the CCU (42%) with 427 admitted via the ED (58%) included in the current registry comprising 730 consecutive PPCI-treated STEMI patients., Results: Groups were similar regarding demographics, medical history and risk factors. Pain-to-CCU time was 151±164 minutes (median-94) for patients admitted directly and 242±226 minutes (160) for those admitted via the ED, while door-to-balloon intervals were 69±42 minutes (61) and 133±102 minutes (111), respectively. LVEF evaluated during admission (48.3±13% [47.5%] vs. 47.7±13.7% [47.5%]) and mean CK level (893±1157 [527] vs. 891±1255 [507], p=0.45) were similar between groups. Mortality was 4.2% vs. 10.3% at 30-days (p<0.002), 7.6% and 14.3% at one-year (p<0.01), reaching 12.2% and 21.9% at 3.9±2.3 years (median-3.5, p<0.004) among directly-admitted patients vs. those admitted via the ED, respectively. Long-term mortality was 4.1%, 9.4%, 21.4%, and 16% for pain-to-balloon quartiles of <140 min, 141-207 min, 208-330 min, and >330 mins, respectively (p=0.026)., Conclusions: Direct admission of STEMI patients to the CCU for PPCI facilitated the attainment of guidelines-dictated door-to-balloon time intervals and yielded improved short- and long-term mortality. Longer pain-to-balloon time was associated with higher long-term mortality.
- Published
- 2019