background & objectives

5
? What more will it take to turn the tide of treatment for angina patients from a PCI-first to an optimal medical therapy–first approach? 1

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?. What more will it take to turn the tide of treatment for angina patients from a PCI-first to an optimal medical therapy–first approach?. Background & objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Background & objectives

?

What more will it take to turn the tide of treatment for angina patients from a

PCI-first to an optimal medical therapy–first approach?

1

Page 2: Background & objectives

Background & objectives

Early randomized trials of percutaneous intervention (PCI) vs medical therapy alone and some meta-analyses demonstrated greater reduction in angina with PCI than with medical therapy alone.

However, prior meta-analyses were based on PCI and medical therapy that do not reflect current interventional practice.

Meta-analysis of contemporary trials has been performed to compare initial coronary stent implantation and medical therapy vs medical therapy alone to determine the effect on death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and persistent angina.

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Page 3: Background & objectives

Stergiopoulos and Brown. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(4):312-319.

Effect of initial stent implantation vs medical management for nonfatal myocardial infarction

non fatal MI

Meta-analysis of eight contemporary trials (7229 patients, 4.3 years follow-up) 

Page 4: Background & objectives

Stergiopoulos and Brown. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(4):312-319.

Effect of initial stent implantation vs medical management for persistent angina

during follow-up

Meta-analysis of eight contemporary trials (7229 patients, 4.3 years follow -up) 

Page 5: Background & objectives

• Implantation of a stent for the treatment of stable coronary artery disease

(CAD) does not lower the risk of death, nor does PCI reduce the risk of

nonfatal MI or angina when compared with optimal medical therapy.

• The failure of stent implantation to reduce the risk of death or MI

compared with medical therapy reinforces current concepts of the

underlying pathophysiologic characteristics of atherosclerosis as a

diffuse process leading to vulnerable plaque disruption and subsequent

coronary thrombosis, MI, and death.

• The findings support recommendations that stable CAD patients should

be treated with medical therapy rather than first undergoing stent

implantation.

Implications