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Myocardial Infarction in the ISCHEMIA Trial: Impact of Different Definitions on Incidence, Prognosis, and Treatment Comparisons.

Authors :
Chaitman, Bernard R
Chaitman, Bernard R
Alexander, Karen P
Cyr, Derek D
Berger, Jeffrey S
Reynolds, Harmony R
Bangalore, Sripal
Boden, William E
Lopes, Renato D
Demkow, Marcin
Piero Perna, Gian
Riezebos, Robert K
McFalls, Edward O
Banerjee, Subhash
Bagai, Akshay
Gosselin, Gilbert
O'Brien, Sean M
Rockhold, Frank W
Waters, David D
Thygesen, Kristian A
Stone, Gregg W
White, Harvey D
Maron, David J
Hochman, Judith S
ISCHEMIA Research Group
Chaitman, Bernard R
Chaitman, Bernard R
Alexander, Karen P
Cyr, Derek D
Berger, Jeffrey S
Reynolds, Harmony R
Bangalore, Sripal
Boden, William E
Lopes, Renato D
Demkow, Marcin
Piero Perna, Gian
Riezebos, Robert K
McFalls, Edward O
Banerjee, Subhash
Bagai, Akshay
Gosselin, Gilbert
O'Brien, Sean M
Rockhold, Frank W
Waters, David D
Thygesen, Kristian A
Stone, Gregg W
White, Harvey D
Maron, David J
Hochman, Judith S
ISCHEMIA Research Group
Source :
Circulation; vol 143, iss 8, 790-804; 0009-7322
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BackgroundIn the ISCHEMIA trial (International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness with Medical and Invasive Approaches), an initial invasive strategy did not significantly reduce rates of cardiovascular events or all-cause mortality in comparison with a conservative strategy in patients with stable ischemic heart disease and moderate/severe myocardial ischemia. The most frequent component of composite cardiovascular end points was myocardial infarction (MI).MethodsISCHEMIA prespecified that the primary and major secondary composite end points of the trial be analyzed using 2 MI definitions. For procedural MI, the primary MI definition used creatine kinase-MB as the preferred biomarker, whereas the secondary definition used cardiac troponin. Procedural thresholds were >5 times the upper reference level for percutaneous coronary intervention and >10 times for coronary artery bypass grafting. Procedural MI definitions included (1) a category of elevated biomarker only events with much higher biomarker thresholds, (2) new ST-segment depression of ≥1 mm for the primary and ≥0.5 mm for the secondary definition, and (3) new coronary dissections >National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grade 3. We compared MI type, frequency, and prognosis by treatment assignment using both MI definitions.ResultsProcedural MIs accounted for 20.1% of all MI events with the primary definition and 40.6% of all MI events with the secondary definition. Four-year MI rates in patients undergoing revascularization were more frequent with the invasive versus conservative strategy using the primary (2.7% versus 1.1%; adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 2.98 [95% CI, 1.87-4.73]) and secondary (8.2% versus 2.0%; adjusted HR, 5.04 [95% CI, 3.64-6.97]) MI definitions. Type 1 MIs were less frequent with the invasive versus conservative strategy using the primary (3.40% versus 6.89%; adjusted HR, 0.53 [95% CI, 0.41-0.69]; P<0.0001) and secondary (3.48% versus 6.89%; adjusted HR, 0.53 [95% CI

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Circulation; vol 143, iss 8, 790-804; 0009-7322
Notes :
application/pdf, Circulation vol 143, iss 8, 790-804 0009-7322
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1377969476
Document Type :
Electronic Resource