Hartford Courant (Sunday)

More stents better

Trial finds extra procedures help after heart attack

- By Dennis Thompson HealthDay

Opening all blockages and not just the “culprit” behind a heart attack reduces a patient’s risk of dying or having another heart attack by 26%, researcher­s reported in September in the New England Journal of Medicine after a major internatio­nal clinical trial. The trial confirms a decade’s worth of research.

Opening all of a person’s clogged arteries after a heart attack can protect their health better than reopening only the one that caused it, a major internatio­nal clinical trial has concluded.

Opening all blockages and not just the “culprit” behind the attack reduces a patient’s risk of dying or having another heart attack by 26%, researcher­s reported in September in the New England Journal of Medicine.

This large-scale trial confirms nearly a decade’s worth of research pointing in the same direction, and should lead to this approach becoming standard practice, said lead researcher Dr. Shamir Mehta. He’s director of interventi­onal cardiology at Hamilton Health Sciences in Hamilton, Ontario.

“The results were very clear. They weren’t borderline,” he said. “It will almost certainly have an impact on the guidelines and on clinical practice, not just in the U.S. or Canada, but worldwide.”

About half of all heart attack victims have more clogged arteries than the one that caused their heart attack, the researcher­s said in background notes.

Of those patients with multiple blockages, at least 80% should be able to benefit from having all of their clogged arteries reopened, said Dr. Samin Sharma, director of clinical and interventi­onal cardiology at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City.

Importantl­y, having the additional blockages reopened did not increase a patient’s risk of other health problems, Sharma noted.

Mehta said: “This study shows that if you do it correctly, nothing happens. The kidney injuries were identical. The vascular complicati­ons were identical. There was no increase in stroke. This approach appears to be a home run in a large number of cases.”

Heart attacks happen because a single clogged artery prevents the flow of blood to the heart, damaging the organ.

Initial treatment focuses on reopening that artery and restoring the flow of oxygen to the heart muscle, Mehta said. But there has been great debate about what to do about other blocked arteries that a patient might have.

“That’s where all the controvers­y has been,” Mehta said. “Should we just leave them alone? Have they been there for years, and are they not going to cause any problems in the future? Should we really run the risk of going back in and opening them just after a patient’s had a major heart attack?”

The guidelines were “really on the fence about this issue,” Mehta said.

“The data wasn’t there to say 100% go ahead and fix them or don’t fix them. It was kind of in the middle.”

At least eight years of studies and clinical trials have provided mounting evidence that reopening all of the blockages should improve a person’s outcome, said Dr. C. Michael Valentine, president of the American College of Cardiology.

“This is the long-awaited confirmati­on that most cardiologi­sts have been waiting for,” said Valentine, a senior cardiologi­st at the Stroobants Cardiovasc­ular Center of Centra Health in Lynchburg, Virginia.

To provide this definitive answer, the researcher­s undertook a clinical trial involving more than 4,000 patients treated at 140 hospitals in 31 countries. All patients had their blocked “culprit”

vessel reopened, Mehta said.

After that initial procedure, about half were randomly chosen for a second procedure days later to reopen the rest of their blocked arteries.

Taking care of the other blockages cut in half a person’s combined risk of either death from heart disease, a repeat heart attack, or a need to return and have another clogged artery reopened due to chest pain or other symptoms, the findings showed.

Over a median of three years, about 8% of patients who had everything reopened suffered a second heart attack or cardiovasc­ular death.

That compared with about 11% of those who received treatment only for the artery that caused the first heart attack.

“We’ve shown clearly that putting stents in these clogged arteries and opening them provides a major benefit,” Mehta said. “The interestin­g thing is that the benefit accrues over the long term. The trial followed patients for up to three years, and the benefit continued to accrue over that period.”

The results show there’s no rush.

Patients benefited from having all blockages reopened even if the followup procedure took place weeks later, Mehta said.

“The nice thing about the trial is if a person is frail or elderly, or if they have kidney disease, it’s OK to delay it and let the patient recover from the initial heart attack,” he said. “Then when they’re strong enough, you can bring them back and do the other vessels.”

It’s important for physicians to understand there are options, he said. “You don’t have to do it right away.”

Still, Sharma suggested, it might be even more cost-effective to clear all the blockages during the initial procedure.

“If you know it’s a simple blockage, why do you need to wait until the next day? Why don’t you do it at the same time? That’s the only question that’s not answered by this study,” Sharma said.

The results of the clinical trial were presented recently at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual meeting in Paris.

 ?? GETTY ?? Opening all blockages and not just the “culprit” behind a heart attack reduces a patient’s risk of dying or having another attack by 26%.
GETTY Opening all blockages and not just the “culprit” behind a heart attack reduces a patient’s risk of dying or having another attack by 26%.

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