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Tranexamic acid in coronary artery surgery: One-year results of the Aspirin and Tranexamic Acid for Coronary Artery Surgery (ATACAS) trial

Authors :
Paul S. Myles
Julian A. Smith
Jessica Kasza
Brendan Silbert
Mohandas Jayarajah
Thomas Painter
D. James Cooper
Silvana Marasco
John McNeil
Jean S. Bussières
Shay McGuinness
Kelly Byrne
Matthew T.V. Chan
Giovanni Landoni
Sophie Wallace
Andrew Forbes
Paul Myles
Julian Smith
Donald Esmore
Henry Krum
A. Tonkin
B. Buxton
S. Heritier
A. Merry
D. Liew
J. McNeil
A. Forbes
D.J. Cooper
S. Wallace
A. Meehan
P. Myles
W. Galagher
C. Farrington
A. Ditoro
L. Wutzlhofer
D. Story
P. Peyton
S. Baulch
S. Sidiropoulos
D. Potgieter
R.A. Baker
B. Pesudovs
E. O'Loughlin J Wells
P. Coutts
S. Bolsin
C. Osborne
K. Ives
J. Smith
A. Hulley
G. Christie-Taylor
T. Painter
S. Lang
H. Mackay
C. Cokis
S. March
P.G. Bannon
C. Wong
L. Turner
D. Scott
B. Silbert
S. Said
P. Corcoran
L. de Prinse
J.S. Bussières
N. Gagné
A. Lamy
L. Semelhago
M.T.V. Chan
M. Underwood
G.S.Y. Choi
B. Fung
G. Landoni
R. Lembo
F. Monaco
F. Simeone
D. Marianello
G. Alvaro
G. De Vuono
D. van Dijk
J. Dieleman
S. Numan
S. McGuinness
R. Parke
P. Raudkivi
E. Gilder
K. Byrne
J. Dunning
J. Termaat
G. Mans
M. Jayarajah
J. Alderton
D. Waugh
M.J. Platt
A. Pai
A. Sevillano
A. Lal
C. Sinclair
G. Kunst
A. Knighton
G.M. Cubas
P. Saravanan
R. Millner
V. Vasudevan
M. Patteril
E. Lopez
R. Basu
J. Lu
Myles, P
Smith, Ja
Kasza, J
Silbert, B
Jayarajah, M
Painter, T
Cooper, Dj
Marasco, S
Mcneil, J
Bussières, J
Mcguinness, S
Byrne, K
Chan, Mtv
Landoni, G
Wallace, S
Forbes, A
ATACAS investigators and the ANZCA Clinical Trials, Network
Source :
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. 157:644-652.e9
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Background Tranexamic acid reduces blood loss and transfusion requirements in cardiac surgery but may increase the risk of coronary graft thrombosis. We previously reported the 30-day results of a trial evaluating tranexamic acid for coronary artery surgery. Here we report the 1-year clinical outcomes. Methods Using a factorial design, we randomly assigned patients undergoing coronary artery surgery to receive aspirin or placebo and tranexamic acid or placebo. The results of the tranexamic acid comparison are reported here. The primary 1-year outcome was death or severe disability, the latter defined as living with a modified Katz activities of daily living score of less than 8. Secondary outcomes included a composite of myocardial infarction, stroke, and death from any cause through to 1 year after surgery. Results The rate of death or disability at 1 year was 3.8% in the tranexamic acid group and 4.4% in the placebo group (relative risk, 0.85; 95% confidence interval, 0.64-1.13; P = .27), and this did not significantly differ according to aspirin exposure at the time of surgery (interaction P = .073). The composite rate of myocardial infarction, stroke, and death up to 1 year after surgery was 14.3% in the tranexamic acid group and 16.4% in the placebo group (relative risk, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.76-1.00; P = .053). Conclusions In this trial of patients having coronary artery surgery, tranexamic acid did not affect death or severe disability through to 1 year after surgery. Further work should be done to explore possible beneficial effects on late cardiovascular events.

Details

ISSN :
00225223
Volume :
157
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....20710d426e51629c5ed140b701c8be1a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2018.09.113