Does ST resolution achieved via different reperfusion strategies (fibrinolysis vs percutaneous coronary intervention) have different prognostic meaning in ST-elevation myocardial infarction? A systematic review - 05/08/11
, Sophia Leon de la Barra, MPH, MPhilPH b, Peter Herbison, MSc bRiassunto |
Objective |
We perform a systematic review to discern if ST resolution achieved via percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) has a different meaning to that achieved via fibrinolysis.
Background |
Resolution of ST-segment elevation in acute myocardial infarction has been widely used as a surrogate for treatment success. A recent randomized study suggested that after primary PCI, the prognostic significance of ST resolution may have been overemphasized.
Methods |
Using the MEDLINE, COCHRANE, EMBASE, and PUBMED databases to search for the relevant papers, we analyze the data with a new ST-resolution score. ST-resolution groups of <30%, 30% to <70%, and ≥70% are given scores of 1, 2, and 3 respectively, whereas ST-resolution groups reported as <50% are scored as 1.5, and ≥50% scored as 2.5.
Results |
We identify 18 fibrinolysis cohorts (32,341 patients) and 5 PCI cohorts (1,913 patients). The mean ST-resolution score weighted for the number of patients in each cohort is 1.87 ± 0.15 for PCI and 1.66 ± 0.20 for fibrinolysis (P < .001). The raw combined 30-day mortality is 4.9% with fibrinolysis and 4.3% with PCI (P = .452 by Poisson regression). There is a linear relationship with lower 30-day mortality associated with higher ST-resolution score. The regression line for the PCI cohorts almost overlaps with that from the fibrinolysis cohorts. On multivariate regression, only ST-resolution score is significant in predicting 30-day mortality. When tested, the interaction term (treatment group × ST resolution score) is never a significant predictor (P > .25 in all models).
Conclusion |
ST resolution after different reperfusion therapies has similar prognostic meaning.
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Vol 160 - N° 5
P. 842 - novembre 2010 Ritorno al numeroBenvenuto su EM|consulte, il riferimento dei professionisti della salute.
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