Coronary stenting is safe and effective in a high-risk octogenarian patient cohort

Autor: Dmitri V, Baklanov, Constantin B, Marcu, Deanna F, Juhasz, Eugene A, Caracciolo, Marek C, Chawarski, Thomas J, Donohue
Rok vydání: 2006
Předmět:
Zdroj: Connecticut medicine. 70(1)
ISSN: 0010-6178
Popis: Octogenarians represent an increasing percentage of patients with coronary heart disease and are an inherently high-risk population. We sought to define the immediate and long-term results of coronary stenting in the "real-world" environment of a community teaching hospital.One hundred ninety-seven consecutive patients older then 80 years who underwent 214 coronary stent procedures were studied. Each patient had postprocedural serial cardiac enzymes and ECG's collected, and was followed for a minimum of 12 months after the procedure. Procedural success was defined as less than 20% residual stenosis, TIMI 3 flow, and absence of major complications (death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, emergent coronary artery bypass graft surgery and stroke). Sixty-five percent of patients presented with an acute coronary syndrome and 93% were functionally New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III or IV.Procedural success was 95%. Death during the index hospitalization occurred in 3% of patients. An additional 4.1% of patients died during follow-up. The target vessel revascularization rate (TVR) during follow up was 8.6%. Multivariate analysis of selected angiographic and clinical variables did not reveal any predictors of major cardiac events.Despite a high-risk clinical and angiographic profile, coronary stenting can be safely performed in octogenarians with a high procedural success rate, low complication rate, and excellent 12-month outcome.
Databáze: OpenAIRE