학술논문

Impact of diabetes mellitus on acute outcomes of percutaneous coronary intervention in chronic total occlusions: insights from a US multicentre registry
Document Type
article
Source
Diabetic Medicine. 34(4)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology
Heart Disease
Diabetes
Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Digestive Diseases
Cardiovascular
Clinical Research
Metabolic and endocrine
Aged
Body Mass Index
Comorbidity
Coronary Artery Bypass
Coronary Occlusion
Diabetes Mellitus
Female
Heart Failure
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Obesity
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
Peripheral Arterial Disease
Prognosis
Prospective Studies
Registries
Retrospective Studies
Treatment Outcome
United States
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Psychology
Endocrinology & Metabolism
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
AimTo examine the impact of diabetes mellitus on procedural outcomes of patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention for chronic total occlusion.MethodsWe assessed the impact of diabetes mellitus on the outcomes of percutaneous coronary intervention for chronic total occlusion among 1308 people who underwent such procedures at 11 US centres between 2012 and 2015.ResultsThe participants' mean ± sd age was 66 ± 10 years, 84% of the participants were men and 44.6% had diabetes. As compared with participants without diabetes, participants with diabetes were more likely to have undergone coronary artery bypass graft surgery (38 vs 31%; P = 0.006), and to have had previous heart failure (35 vs 22%; P = 0.0001) and peripheral arterial disease (19 vs 13%; P = 0.002). They also had a higher BMI (31 ± 6 kg/m2 vs 29 ± 6 kg/m2 ; P = 0.001), similar Japanese chronic total occlusion scores (2.6 ± 1.2 vs 2.5 ± 1.2; P = 0.82) and similar final successful crossing technique: antegrade wire escalation (46 vs 47%; P = 0.66), retrograde (30 vs 28%; P = 0.66) and antegrade dissection re-entry (24 vs 25%; P = 0.66). Technical (91 vs 90%; P = 0.80) and procedural (89 vs 89%; P = 0.93) success was similar in the two groups, as was the incidence of major adverse cardiac events (2.2 vs 2.5%; P = 0.61).ConclusionsIn a contemporary cohort of people undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention for chronic total occlusion, nearly one in two (45%) had diabetes mellitus. Procedural success and complication rates were similar in people with and without diabetes.