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A prognostic computer model to individually predict post-procedural complications in interventional cardiology: the INTERVENT Project.

Authors :
Budde T
Haude M
Höpp HW
Kerber S
Caspari G
Fassbender G
Fingerhut M
Novopashenny I
Ogurol Y
Breithardt G
Erbel R
Erdmann E
Wischnewsky MB
Source :
European heart journal [Eur Heart J] 1999 Mar; Vol. 20 (5), pp. 354-63.
Publication Year :
1999

Abstract

Aims: The purpose of this part of the INTERVENT project was (1) to redefine and individually predict post-procedural complications associated with coronary interventions, including alternative/adjunctive techniques to PTCA and (2) to employ the prognostic INTERVENT computer model to clarify the structural relationship between (pre)-procedural risk factors and post-procedural outcome.<br />Methods and Results: In a multicentre study, 2500 data items of 455 consecutive patients (mean age: 61.1+/-8.3 years: 33-84 years) undergoing coronary interventions at three university centres were analysed. 80.4% of the patients were male, 16.7% had unstable angina, and 5.1%/10.1% acute/subacute myocardial infarction. There were multiple or multivessel stenoses in 16.0%, vessel bending >90 degrees in 14.5%, irregular vessel contours in 65.0%, moderate calcifications in 20.9%, moderate/severe vessel tortuosity in 53.2% and a diameter stenosis of 90%-99% in 44.4% of cases. The in-lab (out-of-lab) complications were: 0.4% (0.9%) death, 1.8% (0.2%) abrupt vessel closure with myocardial infarction and 5.5% (4.0) haemodynamic disorders.<br />Conclusion: Computer algorithms derived from artificial intelligence were able to predict the individual risk of these post-procedural complications with an accuracy of >95% and to explain the structural relationship between risk factors and post-procedural complications. The most important prognostic factors were: heart failure (NYHA class), use of adjunctive/alternative techniques (rotablation, atherectomy, laser), acute coronary ischaemia, pre-existent cardiac medication, stenosis length, stenosis morphology (calcification), gender, age, amount of contrast agent and smoker status. Pre-medication with aspirin or other cardiac medication had a beneficial effect. Techniques, such as laser angioplasty or atherectomy were predictors for post-procedural complications. Single predictors alone were not able to describe the individual outcome completely.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0195-668X
Volume :
20
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European heart journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
10206382
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053/euhj.1998.1198