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Revascularisation or medical therapy in elderly patients with acute anginal syndromes: the RINCAL randomised trial

Authors :
Juliet Wright
William J. Smith
Osama Alsanjari
David Hildick-Smith
Robert Hatrick
Derek R. Robinson
Jonathan Byrne
Fraser Witherow
Andrew Davie
Aung Myat
Robert Gerber
Jonathan Blaxill
Peter Haworth
Rajesh Aggarwal
Dawn L. Adamson
Adam de Belder
Peter O'Kane
Source :
EuroIntervention
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Historically the elderly have been under-represented in non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) management trials. AIMS: The aim of this trial was to demonstrate that an intervention-guided strategy is superior to optimal medical therapy (OMT) alone for treating NSTEMI in elderly individuals. METHODS: Patients (≥80 years, chest pain, ischaemic ECG, and elevated troponin) were randomised 1:1 to an intervention-guided strategy plus OMT versus OMT alone. The primary endpoint was a composite of all-cause mortality and non-fatal myocardial reinfarction at 1 year. Ethics approval was obtained by the institutional review board of every recruiting centre. RESULTS: From May 2014 to September 2018, 251 patients (n=125 invasive vs n=126 conservative) were enrolled. Almost 50% of participants were female. The trial was terminated prematurely due to slow recruitment. A Kaplan-Meier estimate of event-free survival revealed no difference in the primary endpoint at 1 year (invasive 18.5% [23/124] vs conservative 22.2% [28/126]; p=0.39). No significant difference persisted after Cox proportional hazards regression analysis (hazard ratio 0.79, 95% confidence interval 0.45-1.35; p=0.39). There was greater freedom from angina at 3 months (p

Details

ISSN :
19696213
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EuroIntervention : journal of EuroPCR in collaboration with the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d97c9c159e0a175c55c30c6fe53db72