Back to Search Start Over

Impact of Smoking Status on Mortality in STEMI Patients Undergoing Mechanical Reperfusion for STEMI: Insights from the ISACS-STEMI COVID-19 Registry.

Authors :
De Luca G
Algowhary M
Uguz B
Oliveira DC
Ganyukov V
Zimbakov Z
Cercek M
Jensen LO
Loh PH
Calmac L
Ferrer GRI
Quadros A
Milewski M
Scotto D'Uccio F
von Birgelen C
Versaci F
Ten Berg J
Casella G
Wong Sung Lung A
Kala P
Díez Gil JL
Carrillo X
Dirksen M
Becerra-Munoz VM
Lee MK
Juzar DA
Joaquim RM
Paladino R
Milicic D
Davlouros P
Bakraceski N
Zilio F
Donazzan L
Kraaijeveld A
Galasso G
Arpad L
Lucia M
Vincenzo G
Menichelli M
Scoccia A
Yamac AH
Ugur Mert K
Flores Rios X
Kovarnik T
Kidawa M
Moreu J
Vincent F
Fabris E
Martínez-Luengas IL
Boccalatte M
Bosa Ojeda F
Arellano-Serrano C
Caiazzo G
Cirrincione G
Kao HL
Sanchis Forés J
Vignali L
Pereira H
Manzo S
Ordoñez S
Özkan AA
Scheller B
Lehtola H
Teles R
Mantis C
Antti Y
Silveira JAB
Zoni R
Bessonov I
Savonitto S
Kochiadakis G
Alexopulos D
Uribe CE
Kanakakis J
Faurie B
Gabrielli G
Barrios AG
Bachini JP
Rocha A
Tam FC
Rodriguez A
Lukito AA
Saint-Joy V
Pessah G
Tuccillo A
Cortese G
Parodi G
Bouraghda MA
Kedhi E
Lamelas P
Suryapranata H
Nardin M
Verdoia M
Source :
Journal of clinical medicine [J Clin Med] 2022 Nov 13; Vol. 11 (22). Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Nov 13.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The so-called “smoking paradox”, conditioning lower mortality in smokers among STEMI patients, has seldom been addressed in the settings of modern primary PCI protocols. The ISACS−STEMI COVID-19 is a large-scale retrospective multicenter registry addressing in-hospital mortality, reperfusion, and 30-day mortality among primary PCI patients in the era of the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the 16,083 STEMI patients, 6819 (42.3%) patients were active smokers, 2099 (13.1%) previous smokers, and 7165 (44.6%) non-smokers. Despite the impaired preprocedural recanalization (p < 0.001), active smokers had a significantly better postprocedural TIMI flow compared with non-smokers (p < 0.001); this was confirmed after adjustment for all baseline and procedural confounders, and the propensity score. Active smokers had a significantly lower in-hospital (p < 0.001) and 30-day (p < 0.001) mortality compared with non-smokers and previous smokers; this was confirmed after adjustment for all baseline and procedural confounders, and the propensity score. In conclusion, in our population, active smoking was significantly associated with improved epicardial recanalization and lower in-hospital and 30-day mortality compared with previous and non-smoking history.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2077-0383
Volume :
11
Issue :
22
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of clinical medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36431198
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11226722