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Risk of cardiac and sudden death with and without revascularisation of a coronary chronic total occlusion

Authors :
Andrea Munafò
Matteo Montorfano
Carlo Andrea Pivato
Luca Baldetti
Giacomo Frati
Antonio Colombo
Alberto Margonato
Francesco Melillo
Cosmo Godino
Alessia Giannattasio
Alberto Cappelletti
Mauro Carlino
Lorenzo Azzalini
Alessandro Beneduce
Andrea Scotti
Giuseppe Biondi Zoccai
Gabriele Fragasso
Mauro Chiarito
Godino, Cosmo
Giannattasio, Alessia
Scotti, Andrea
Baldetti, Luca
Pivato, Carlo Andrea
Munafò, Andrea
Cappelletti, Alberto
Beneduce, Alessandro
Melillo, Francesco
Chiarito, Mauro
Biondi Zoccai, Giuseppe
Frati, Giacomo
Fragasso, Gabriele
Azzalini, Lorenzo
Carlino, Mauro
Montorfano, Matteo
Margonato, Alberto
Colombo, Antonio
Source :
Heart (British Cardiac Society). 105(14)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

ObjectiveThe aim of this study is to evaluate the long-term risk of cardiac death and sudden cardiac death (SCD) and/or sustained ventricular arrhythmias (SVAs) in patients with coronary chronic total occlusions (CTO) revascularised versus those with CTO not revascularised by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).MethodsFrom a cohort of 1357 CTO-PCI patients, 1162 patients who underwent CTO PCI attempt were included in this long-term analysis: 837 patients were revascularised by PCI (CTO-R group) and 325 were not revascularised (CTO-NR group). Primary adverse endpoint was the incidence of cardiac death; secondary endpoint was the cumulative incidence of SCD/SVAs.ResultsUp to 12-year follow-up (median 6 year), compared with CTO-R patients, those with CTO-NR had significantly higher rate of cardiac death (13%[43/325]vs6%[48/837]; pConclusionsAt long-term follow-up, patients with CTO not revascularised by PCI had worse outcomes compared with those with CTO revascularised, with >2-fold risk of cardiac death and threefold risk of SCD/SVAs. The presence of an infarct-related artery (IRA CTO) not revascularised identified the category of patients with the highest rate of adverse events .

Details

ISSN :
1468201X
Volume :
105
Issue :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart (British Cardiac Society)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b0ce3f33fbd3f8d00451237d0d2dab6