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Effect of Supersaturated Oxygen Delivery on Infarct Size After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Acute Myocardial Infarction

Authors :
Gregg W, Stone
Jack L, Martin
Menko-Jan, de Boer
Massimo, Margheri
Ezio, Bramucci
James C, Blankenship
D Christopher, Metzger
Raymond J, Gibbons
Barbara S, Lindsay
Bonnie H, Weiner
Alexandra J, Lansky
Mitchell W, Krucoff
Martin, Fahy
W John, Boscardin
J, Crump
Source :
Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions. 2:366-375
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2009.

Abstract

Background— Myocardial salvage is often suboptimal after percutaneous coronary intervention in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. Posthoc subgroup analysis from a previous trial (AMIHOT I) suggested that intracoronary delivery of supersaturated oxygen (SSO 2 ) may reduce infarct size in patients with large ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction treated early. Methods and Results— A prospective, multicenter trial was performed in which 301 patients with anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention within 6 hours of symptom onset were randomized to a 90-minute intracoronary SSO 2 infusion in the left anterior descending artery infarct territory (n=222) or control (n=79). The primary efficacy measure was infarct size in the intention-to-treat population (powered for superiority), and the primary safety measure was composite major adverse cardiovascular events at 30 days in the intention-to-treat and per-protocol populations (powered for noninferiority), with Bayesian hierarchical modeling used to allow partial pooling of evidence from AMIHOT I. Among 281 randomized patients with tc-99m-sestamibi single-photon emission computed tomography data in AMIHOT II, median (interquartile range) infarct size was 26.5% (8.5%, 44%) with control compared with 20% (6%, 37%) after SSO 2 . The pooled adjusted infarct size was 25% (7%, 42%) with control compared with 18.5% (3.5%, 34.5%) after SSO 2 ( P Wilcoxon =0.02; Bayesian posterior probability of superiority, 96.9%). The Bayesian pooled 30-day mean (�SE) rates of major adverse cardiovascular events were 5.0�1.4% for control and 5.9�1.4% for SSO 2 by intention-to-treat, and 5.1�1.5% for control and 4.7�1.5% for SSO 2 by per-protocol analysis (posterior probability of noninferiority, 99.5% and 99.9%, respectively). Conclusions— Among patients with anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention within 6 hours of symptom onset, infusion of SSO 2 into the left anterior descending artery infarct territory results in a significant reduction in infarct size with noninferior rates of major adverse cardiovascular events at 30 days. Clinical Trial Registration— clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00175058

Details

ISSN :
19417632 and 19417640
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f5a41160fe6011032032b2faf9f1d321