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New ESC guidelines for cutting CV risk in noncardiac surgery

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Mon, 09/19/2022 - 13:59

The European Society of Cardiology guidelines on cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery have seen extensive revision since the 2014 version.

They still have the same aim – to prevent surgery-related bleeding complications, perioperative myocardial infarction/injury (PMI), stent thrombosis, acute heart failure, arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, ischemic stroke, and cardiovascular (CV) death.

Surgeons_Operating_Theater_web.jpg

Cochairpersons Sigrun Halvorsen, MD, PhD, and Julinda Mehilli, MD, presented highlights from the guidelines at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology and the document was simultaneously published online in the European Heart Journal.

The document classifies noncardiac surgery into three levels of 30-day risk of CV death, MI, or stroke. Low (< 1%) risk includes eye or thyroid surgery; intermediate (1%-5%) risk includes knee or hip replacement or renal transplant; and high (> 5%) risk includes aortic aneurysm, lung transplant, or pancreatic or bladder cancer surgery (see more examples below).

It classifies patients as low risk if they are younger than 65 without CV disease or CV risk factors (smoking, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, family history); intermediate risk if they are 65 or older or have CV risk factors; and high risk if they have CVD.  

In an interview, Dr. Halvorsen, professor in cardiology, University of Oslo, zeroed in on three important revisions:

First, recommendations for preoperative ECG and biomarkers are more specific, he noted.

The guidelines advise that before intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery, in patients who have known CVD, CV risk factors (including age 65 or older), or symptoms suggestive of CVD:

  • It is recommended to obtain a preoperative 12-lead ECG (class I).
  • It is recommended to measure high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTn T) or high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I (hs-cTn I). It is also recommended to measure these biomarkers at 24 hours and 48 hours post surgery (class I).
  • It should be considered to measure B-type natriuretic peptide or N-terminal of the prohormone BNP (NT-proBNP).

However, for low-risk patients undergoing low- and intermediate-risk noncardiac surgery, it is not recommended to routinely obtain preoperative ECG, hs-cTn T/I, or BNP/NT-proBNP concentrations (class III).

Troponins have a stronger class I recommendation, compared with the IIA recommendation for BNP, because they are useful for preoperative risk stratification and for diagnosis of PMI, Dr. Halvorsen explained. “Patients receive painkillers after surgery and may have no pain,” she noted, but they may have PMI, which has a bad prognosis.

Second, the guidelines recommend that “all patients should stop smoking 4 weeks before noncardiac surgery [class I],” she noted. Clinicians should also “measure hemoglobin, and if the patient is anemic, treat the anemia.”

Third, the sections on antithrombotic treatment have been significantly revised. “Bridging – stopping an oral antithrombotic drug and switching to a subcutaneous or IV drug – has been common,” Dr. Halvorsen said, “but recently we have new evidence that in most cases that increases the risk of bleeding.”

“We are [now] much more restrictive with respect to bridging” with unfractionated heparin or low-molecular-weight heparin, she said. “We recommend against bridging in patients with low to moderate thrombotic risk,” and bridging should only be considered in patients with mechanical prosthetic heart valves or with very high thrombotic risk.
 

 

 

More preoperative recommendations

In the guideline overview session at the congress, Dr. Halverson highlighted some of the new recommendations for preoperative risk assessment.  

If time allows, it is recommended to optimize guideline-recommended treatment of CVD and control of CV risk factors including blood pressure, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, before noncardiac surgery (class I).

Patients commonly have “murmurs, chest pain, dyspnea, and edema that may suggest severe CVD, but may also be caused by noncardiac disease,” she noted. The guidelines state that “for patients with a newly detected murmur and symptoms or signs of CVD, transthoracic echocardiography is recommended before noncardiac surgery (class I).

“Many studies have been performed to try to find out if initiation of specific drugs before surgery could reduce the risk of complications,” Dr. Halvorsen noted. However, few have shown any benefit and “the question of presurgery initiation of beta-blockers has been greatly debated,” she said. “We have again reviewed the literature and concluded ‘Routine initiation of beta-blockers perioperatively is not recommended (class IIIA).’ “

“We adhere to the guidelines on acute and chronic coronary syndrome recommending 6-12 months of dual antiplatelet treatment as a standard before elective surgery,” she said. “However, in case of time-sensitive surgery, the duration of that treatment can be shortened down to a minimum of 1 month after elective PCI and a minimum of 3 months after PCI and ACS.”
 

Patients with specific types of CVD

Dr. Mehilli, a professor at Landshut-Achdorf (Germany) Hospital, highlighted some new guideline recommendations for patients who have specific types of cardiovascular disease.

Coronary artery disease (CAD). “For chronic coronary syndrome, a cardiac workup is recommended only for patients undergoing intermediate risk or high-risk noncardiac surgery.”

“Stress imaging should be considered before any high risk, noncardiac surgery in asymptomatic patients with poor functional capacity and prior PCI or coronary artery bypass graft (new recommendation, class IIa).”

Mitral valve regurgitation. For patients undergoing scheduled noncardiac surgery, who remain symptomatic despite guideline-directed medical treatment for mitral valve regurgitation (including resynchronization and myocardial revascularization), consider a valve intervention – either transcatheter or surgical – before noncardiac surgery in eligible patients with acceptable procedural risk (new recommendation).

Cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED). For high-risk patients with CIEDs undergoing noncardiac surgery with high probability of electromagnetic interference, a CIED checkup and necessary reprogramming immediately before the procedure should be considered (new recommendation).

Arrhythmias. “I want only to stress,” Dr. Mehilli said, “in patients with atrial fibrillation with acute or worsening hemodynamic instability undergoing noncardiac surgery, an emergency electrical cardioversion is recommended (class I).”

Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and abdominal aortic aneurysm. For these patients “we do not recommend a routine referral for a cardiac workup. But we recommend it for patients with poor functional capacity or with significant risk factors or symptoms (new recommendations).”

Chronic arterial hypertension. “We have modified the recommendation, recommending avoidance of large perioperative fluctuations in blood pressure, and we do not recommend deferring noncardiac surgery in patients with stage 1 or 2 hypertension,” she said.
 

Postoperative cardiovascular complications

The most frequent postoperative cardiovascular complication is PMI, Dr. Mehilli noted.

“In the BASEL-PMI registry, the incidence of this complication around intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery was up to 15% among patients older than 65 years or with a history of CAD or PAD, which makes this kind of complication really important to prevent, to assess, and to know how to treat.”

“It is recommended to have a high awareness for perioperative cardiovascular complications, combined with surveillance for PMI in patients undergoing intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery” based on serial measurements of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin.

The guidelines define PMI as “an increase in the delta of high-sensitivity troponin more than the upper level of normal,” Dr. Mehilli said. “It’s different from the one used in a rule-in algorithm for non-STEMI acute coronary syndrome.”

Postoperative atrial fibrillation (AFib) is observed in 2%-30% of noncardiac surgery patients in different registries, particularly in patients undergoing intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery, she noted.

“We propose an algorithm on how to prevent and treat this complication. I want to highlight that in patients with hemodynamic unstable postoperative AF[ib], an emergency cardioversion is indicated. For the others, a rate control with the target heart rate of less than 110 beats per minute is indicated.”

In patients with postoperative AFib, long-term oral anticoagulation therapy should be considered in all patients at risk for stroke, considering the anticipated net clinical benefit of oral anticoagulation therapy as well as informed patient preference (new recommendations).

Routine use of beta-blockers to prevent postoperative AFib in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery is not recommended.

The document also covers the management of patients with kidney disease, diabetes, cancer, obesity, and COVID-19. In general, elective noncardiac surgery should be postponed after a patient has COVID-19, until he or she recovers completely, and coexisting conditions are optimized.

The guidelines are available from the ESC website in several formats: pocket guidelines, pocket guidelines smartphone app, guidelines slide set, essential messages, and the European Heart Journal article.
 

Noncardiac surgery risk categories

The guideline includes a table that classifies noncardiac surgeries into three groups, based on the associated 30-day risk of death, MI, or stroke:

  • Low (< 1%): breast, dental, eye, thyroid, and minor gynecologic, orthopedic, and urologic surgery.
  • Intermediate (1%-5%): carotid surgery, endovascular aortic aneurysm repair, gallbladder surgery, head or neck surgery, hernia repair, peripheral arterial angioplasty, renal transplant, major gynecologic, orthopedic, or neurologic (hip or spine) surgery, or urologic surgery
  • High (> 5%): aortic and major vascular surgery (including aortic aneurysm), bladder removal (usually as a result of cancer), limb amputation, lung or liver transplant, pancreatic surgery, or perforated bowel repair.

The guidelines were endorsed by the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care. The guideline authors reported numerous disclosures.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The European Society of Cardiology guidelines on cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery have seen extensive revision since the 2014 version.

They still have the same aim – to prevent surgery-related bleeding complications, perioperative myocardial infarction/injury (PMI), stent thrombosis, acute heart failure, arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, ischemic stroke, and cardiovascular (CV) death.

Surgeons_Operating_Theater_web.jpg

Cochairpersons Sigrun Halvorsen, MD, PhD, and Julinda Mehilli, MD, presented highlights from the guidelines at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology and the document was simultaneously published online in the European Heart Journal.

The document classifies noncardiac surgery into three levels of 30-day risk of CV death, MI, or stroke. Low (< 1%) risk includes eye or thyroid surgery; intermediate (1%-5%) risk includes knee or hip replacement or renal transplant; and high (> 5%) risk includes aortic aneurysm, lung transplant, or pancreatic or bladder cancer surgery (see more examples below).

It classifies patients as low risk if they are younger than 65 without CV disease or CV risk factors (smoking, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, family history); intermediate risk if they are 65 or older or have CV risk factors; and high risk if they have CVD.  

In an interview, Dr. Halvorsen, professor in cardiology, University of Oslo, zeroed in on three important revisions:

First, recommendations for preoperative ECG and biomarkers are more specific, he noted.

The guidelines advise that before intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery, in patients who have known CVD, CV risk factors (including age 65 or older), or symptoms suggestive of CVD:

  • It is recommended to obtain a preoperative 12-lead ECG (class I).
  • It is recommended to measure high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTn T) or high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I (hs-cTn I). It is also recommended to measure these biomarkers at 24 hours and 48 hours post surgery (class I).
  • It should be considered to measure B-type natriuretic peptide or N-terminal of the prohormone BNP (NT-proBNP).

However, for low-risk patients undergoing low- and intermediate-risk noncardiac surgery, it is not recommended to routinely obtain preoperative ECG, hs-cTn T/I, or BNP/NT-proBNP concentrations (class III).

Troponins have a stronger class I recommendation, compared with the IIA recommendation for BNP, because they are useful for preoperative risk stratification and for diagnosis of PMI, Dr. Halvorsen explained. “Patients receive painkillers after surgery and may have no pain,” she noted, but they may have PMI, which has a bad prognosis.

Second, the guidelines recommend that “all patients should stop smoking 4 weeks before noncardiac surgery [class I],” she noted. Clinicians should also “measure hemoglobin, and if the patient is anemic, treat the anemia.”

Third, the sections on antithrombotic treatment have been significantly revised. “Bridging – stopping an oral antithrombotic drug and switching to a subcutaneous or IV drug – has been common,” Dr. Halvorsen said, “but recently we have new evidence that in most cases that increases the risk of bleeding.”

“We are [now] much more restrictive with respect to bridging” with unfractionated heparin or low-molecular-weight heparin, she said. “We recommend against bridging in patients with low to moderate thrombotic risk,” and bridging should only be considered in patients with mechanical prosthetic heart valves or with very high thrombotic risk.
 

 

 

More preoperative recommendations

In the guideline overview session at the congress, Dr. Halverson highlighted some of the new recommendations for preoperative risk assessment.  

If time allows, it is recommended to optimize guideline-recommended treatment of CVD and control of CV risk factors including blood pressure, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, before noncardiac surgery (class I).

Patients commonly have “murmurs, chest pain, dyspnea, and edema that may suggest severe CVD, but may also be caused by noncardiac disease,” she noted. The guidelines state that “for patients with a newly detected murmur and symptoms or signs of CVD, transthoracic echocardiography is recommended before noncardiac surgery (class I).

“Many studies have been performed to try to find out if initiation of specific drugs before surgery could reduce the risk of complications,” Dr. Halvorsen noted. However, few have shown any benefit and “the question of presurgery initiation of beta-blockers has been greatly debated,” she said. “We have again reviewed the literature and concluded ‘Routine initiation of beta-blockers perioperatively is not recommended (class IIIA).’ “

“We adhere to the guidelines on acute and chronic coronary syndrome recommending 6-12 months of dual antiplatelet treatment as a standard before elective surgery,” she said. “However, in case of time-sensitive surgery, the duration of that treatment can be shortened down to a minimum of 1 month after elective PCI and a minimum of 3 months after PCI and ACS.”
 

Patients with specific types of CVD

Dr. Mehilli, a professor at Landshut-Achdorf (Germany) Hospital, highlighted some new guideline recommendations for patients who have specific types of cardiovascular disease.

Coronary artery disease (CAD). “For chronic coronary syndrome, a cardiac workup is recommended only for patients undergoing intermediate risk or high-risk noncardiac surgery.”

“Stress imaging should be considered before any high risk, noncardiac surgery in asymptomatic patients with poor functional capacity and prior PCI or coronary artery bypass graft (new recommendation, class IIa).”

Mitral valve regurgitation. For patients undergoing scheduled noncardiac surgery, who remain symptomatic despite guideline-directed medical treatment for mitral valve regurgitation (including resynchronization and myocardial revascularization), consider a valve intervention – either transcatheter or surgical – before noncardiac surgery in eligible patients with acceptable procedural risk (new recommendation).

Cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED). For high-risk patients with CIEDs undergoing noncardiac surgery with high probability of electromagnetic interference, a CIED checkup and necessary reprogramming immediately before the procedure should be considered (new recommendation).

Arrhythmias. “I want only to stress,” Dr. Mehilli said, “in patients with atrial fibrillation with acute or worsening hemodynamic instability undergoing noncardiac surgery, an emergency electrical cardioversion is recommended (class I).”

Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and abdominal aortic aneurysm. For these patients “we do not recommend a routine referral for a cardiac workup. But we recommend it for patients with poor functional capacity or with significant risk factors or symptoms (new recommendations).”

Chronic arterial hypertension. “We have modified the recommendation, recommending avoidance of large perioperative fluctuations in blood pressure, and we do not recommend deferring noncardiac surgery in patients with stage 1 or 2 hypertension,” she said.
 

Postoperative cardiovascular complications

The most frequent postoperative cardiovascular complication is PMI, Dr. Mehilli noted.

“In the BASEL-PMI registry, the incidence of this complication around intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery was up to 15% among patients older than 65 years or with a history of CAD or PAD, which makes this kind of complication really important to prevent, to assess, and to know how to treat.”

“It is recommended to have a high awareness for perioperative cardiovascular complications, combined with surveillance for PMI in patients undergoing intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery” based on serial measurements of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin.

The guidelines define PMI as “an increase in the delta of high-sensitivity troponin more than the upper level of normal,” Dr. Mehilli said. “It’s different from the one used in a rule-in algorithm for non-STEMI acute coronary syndrome.”

Postoperative atrial fibrillation (AFib) is observed in 2%-30% of noncardiac surgery patients in different registries, particularly in patients undergoing intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery, she noted.

“We propose an algorithm on how to prevent and treat this complication. I want to highlight that in patients with hemodynamic unstable postoperative AF[ib], an emergency cardioversion is indicated. For the others, a rate control with the target heart rate of less than 110 beats per minute is indicated.”

In patients with postoperative AFib, long-term oral anticoagulation therapy should be considered in all patients at risk for stroke, considering the anticipated net clinical benefit of oral anticoagulation therapy as well as informed patient preference (new recommendations).

Routine use of beta-blockers to prevent postoperative AFib in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery is not recommended.

The document also covers the management of patients with kidney disease, diabetes, cancer, obesity, and COVID-19. In general, elective noncardiac surgery should be postponed after a patient has COVID-19, until he or she recovers completely, and coexisting conditions are optimized.

The guidelines are available from the ESC website in several formats: pocket guidelines, pocket guidelines smartphone app, guidelines slide set, essential messages, and the European Heart Journal article.
 

Noncardiac surgery risk categories

The guideline includes a table that classifies noncardiac surgeries into three groups, based on the associated 30-day risk of death, MI, or stroke:

  • Low (< 1%): breast, dental, eye, thyroid, and minor gynecologic, orthopedic, and urologic surgery.
  • Intermediate (1%-5%): carotid surgery, endovascular aortic aneurysm repair, gallbladder surgery, head or neck surgery, hernia repair, peripheral arterial angioplasty, renal transplant, major gynecologic, orthopedic, or neurologic (hip or spine) surgery, or urologic surgery
  • High (> 5%): aortic and major vascular surgery (including aortic aneurysm), bladder removal (usually as a result of cancer), limb amputation, lung or liver transplant, pancreatic surgery, or perforated bowel repair.

The guidelines were endorsed by the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care. The guideline authors reported numerous disclosures.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The European Society of Cardiology guidelines on cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery have seen extensive revision since the 2014 version.

They still have the same aim – to prevent surgery-related bleeding complications, perioperative myocardial infarction/injury (PMI), stent thrombosis, acute heart failure, arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, ischemic stroke, and cardiovascular (CV) death.

Surgeons_Operating_Theater_web.jpg

Cochairpersons Sigrun Halvorsen, MD, PhD, and Julinda Mehilli, MD, presented highlights from the guidelines at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology and the document was simultaneously published online in the European Heart Journal.

The document classifies noncardiac surgery into three levels of 30-day risk of CV death, MI, or stroke. Low (< 1%) risk includes eye or thyroid surgery; intermediate (1%-5%) risk includes knee or hip replacement or renal transplant; and high (> 5%) risk includes aortic aneurysm, lung transplant, or pancreatic or bladder cancer surgery (see more examples below).

It classifies patients as low risk if they are younger than 65 without CV disease or CV risk factors (smoking, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, family history); intermediate risk if they are 65 or older or have CV risk factors; and high risk if they have CVD.  

In an interview, Dr. Halvorsen, professor in cardiology, University of Oslo, zeroed in on three important revisions:

First, recommendations for preoperative ECG and biomarkers are more specific, he noted.

The guidelines advise that before intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery, in patients who have known CVD, CV risk factors (including age 65 or older), or symptoms suggestive of CVD:

  • It is recommended to obtain a preoperative 12-lead ECG (class I).
  • It is recommended to measure high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTn T) or high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I (hs-cTn I). It is also recommended to measure these biomarkers at 24 hours and 48 hours post surgery (class I).
  • It should be considered to measure B-type natriuretic peptide or N-terminal of the prohormone BNP (NT-proBNP).

However, for low-risk patients undergoing low- and intermediate-risk noncardiac surgery, it is not recommended to routinely obtain preoperative ECG, hs-cTn T/I, or BNP/NT-proBNP concentrations (class III).

Troponins have a stronger class I recommendation, compared with the IIA recommendation for BNP, because they are useful for preoperative risk stratification and for diagnosis of PMI, Dr. Halvorsen explained. “Patients receive painkillers after surgery and may have no pain,” she noted, but they may have PMI, which has a bad prognosis.

Second, the guidelines recommend that “all patients should stop smoking 4 weeks before noncardiac surgery [class I],” she noted. Clinicians should also “measure hemoglobin, and if the patient is anemic, treat the anemia.”

Third, the sections on antithrombotic treatment have been significantly revised. “Bridging – stopping an oral antithrombotic drug and switching to a subcutaneous or IV drug – has been common,” Dr. Halvorsen said, “but recently we have new evidence that in most cases that increases the risk of bleeding.”

“We are [now] much more restrictive with respect to bridging” with unfractionated heparin or low-molecular-weight heparin, she said. “We recommend against bridging in patients with low to moderate thrombotic risk,” and bridging should only be considered in patients with mechanical prosthetic heart valves or with very high thrombotic risk.
 

 

 

More preoperative recommendations

In the guideline overview session at the congress, Dr. Halverson highlighted some of the new recommendations for preoperative risk assessment.  

If time allows, it is recommended to optimize guideline-recommended treatment of CVD and control of CV risk factors including blood pressure, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, before noncardiac surgery (class I).

Patients commonly have “murmurs, chest pain, dyspnea, and edema that may suggest severe CVD, but may also be caused by noncardiac disease,” she noted. The guidelines state that “for patients with a newly detected murmur and symptoms or signs of CVD, transthoracic echocardiography is recommended before noncardiac surgery (class I).

“Many studies have been performed to try to find out if initiation of specific drugs before surgery could reduce the risk of complications,” Dr. Halvorsen noted. However, few have shown any benefit and “the question of presurgery initiation of beta-blockers has been greatly debated,” she said. “We have again reviewed the literature and concluded ‘Routine initiation of beta-blockers perioperatively is not recommended (class IIIA).’ “

“We adhere to the guidelines on acute and chronic coronary syndrome recommending 6-12 months of dual antiplatelet treatment as a standard before elective surgery,” she said. “However, in case of time-sensitive surgery, the duration of that treatment can be shortened down to a minimum of 1 month after elective PCI and a minimum of 3 months after PCI and ACS.”
 

Patients with specific types of CVD

Dr. Mehilli, a professor at Landshut-Achdorf (Germany) Hospital, highlighted some new guideline recommendations for patients who have specific types of cardiovascular disease.

Coronary artery disease (CAD). “For chronic coronary syndrome, a cardiac workup is recommended only for patients undergoing intermediate risk or high-risk noncardiac surgery.”

“Stress imaging should be considered before any high risk, noncardiac surgery in asymptomatic patients with poor functional capacity and prior PCI or coronary artery bypass graft (new recommendation, class IIa).”

Mitral valve regurgitation. For patients undergoing scheduled noncardiac surgery, who remain symptomatic despite guideline-directed medical treatment for mitral valve regurgitation (including resynchronization and myocardial revascularization), consider a valve intervention – either transcatheter or surgical – before noncardiac surgery in eligible patients with acceptable procedural risk (new recommendation).

Cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED). For high-risk patients with CIEDs undergoing noncardiac surgery with high probability of electromagnetic interference, a CIED checkup and necessary reprogramming immediately before the procedure should be considered (new recommendation).

Arrhythmias. “I want only to stress,” Dr. Mehilli said, “in patients with atrial fibrillation with acute or worsening hemodynamic instability undergoing noncardiac surgery, an emergency electrical cardioversion is recommended (class I).”

Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and abdominal aortic aneurysm. For these patients “we do not recommend a routine referral for a cardiac workup. But we recommend it for patients with poor functional capacity or with significant risk factors or symptoms (new recommendations).”

Chronic arterial hypertension. “We have modified the recommendation, recommending avoidance of large perioperative fluctuations in blood pressure, and we do not recommend deferring noncardiac surgery in patients with stage 1 or 2 hypertension,” she said.
 

Postoperative cardiovascular complications

The most frequent postoperative cardiovascular complication is PMI, Dr. Mehilli noted.

“In the BASEL-PMI registry, the incidence of this complication around intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery was up to 15% among patients older than 65 years or with a history of CAD or PAD, which makes this kind of complication really important to prevent, to assess, and to know how to treat.”

“It is recommended to have a high awareness for perioperative cardiovascular complications, combined with surveillance for PMI in patients undergoing intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery” based on serial measurements of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin.

The guidelines define PMI as “an increase in the delta of high-sensitivity troponin more than the upper level of normal,” Dr. Mehilli said. “It’s different from the one used in a rule-in algorithm for non-STEMI acute coronary syndrome.”

Postoperative atrial fibrillation (AFib) is observed in 2%-30% of noncardiac surgery patients in different registries, particularly in patients undergoing intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery, she noted.

“We propose an algorithm on how to prevent and treat this complication. I want to highlight that in patients with hemodynamic unstable postoperative AF[ib], an emergency cardioversion is indicated. For the others, a rate control with the target heart rate of less than 110 beats per minute is indicated.”

In patients with postoperative AFib, long-term oral anticoagulation therapy should be considered in all patients at risk for stroke, considering the anticipated net clinical benefit of oral anticoagulation therapy as well as informed patient preference (new recommendations).

Routine use of beta-blockers to prevent postoperative AFib in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery is not recommended.

The document also covers the management of patients with kidney disease, diabetes, cancer, obesity, and COVID-19. In general, elective noncardiac surgery should be postponed after a patient has COVID-19, until he or she recovers completely, and coexisting conditions are optimized.

The guidelines are available from the ESC website in several formats: pocket guidelines, pocket guidelines smartphone app, guidelines slide set, essential messages, and the European Heart Journal article.
 

Noncardiac surgery risk categories

The guideline includes a table that classifies noncardiac surgeries into three groups, based on the associated 30-day risk of death, MI, or stroke:

  • Low (< 1%): breast, dental, eye, thyroid, and minor gynecologic, orthopedic, and urologic surgery.
  • Intermediate (1%-5%): carotid surgery, endovascular aortic aneurysm repair, gallbladder surgery, head or neck surgery, hernia repair, peripheral arterial angioplasty, renal transplant, major gynecologic, orthopedic, or neurologic (hip or spine) surgery, or urologic surgery
  • High (> 5%): aortic and major vascular surgery (including aortic aneurysm), bladder removal (usually as a result of cancer), limb amputation, lung or liver transplant, pancreatic surgery, or perforated bowel repair.

The guidelines were endorsed by the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care. The guideline authors reported numerous disclosures.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>The European Society of Cardiology guidelines on cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery have seen extensive revision</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage>217939</teaserImage> <teaser>The guidelines, which aim to reduce cardiovascular complications from noncardiac surgery, introduce new concepts and recommendations, compared with the previous 2014 document.</teaser> <title>New ESC guidelines for cutting CV risk in noncardiac surgery</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>mdsurg</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> <journalTitle/> <journalFullTitle/> <copyrightStatement>2018 Frontline Medical Communications Inc.,</copyrightStatement> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>card</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>hemn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>chph</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>52226</term> <term canonical="true">5</term> <term>18</term> <term>6</term> <term>21</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>39313</term> <term>75</term> </sections> <topics> <term>187</term> <term>348</term> <term>337</term> <term>212</term> <term>351</term> <term>352</term> <term>220</term> <term>338</term> <term>227</term> <term>237</term> <term>252</term> <term>258</term> <term>263</term> <term>264</term> <term>267</term> <term>331</term> <term>268</term> <term>290</term> <term>295</term> <term>298</term> <term>342</term> <term>280</term> <term canonical="true">173</term> <term>224</term> <term>185</term> <term>301</term> <term>304</term> <term>284</term> <term>328</term> <term>194</term> </topics> <links> <link> <itemClass qcode="ninat:picture"/> <altRep contenttype="image/jpeg">images/24009a0a.jpg</altRep> <description role="drol:caption"/> <description role="drol:credit">lyosha_nazarenko/Thinkstock</description> </link> </links> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>New ESC guidelines for cutting CV risk in noncardiac surgery</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>The European Society of Cardiology guidelines on cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery have seen extensive revision since the 2014 version.</p> <p>They still have the same aim – to prevent surgery-related bleeding complications, perioperative myocardial infarction/injury (PMI), stent thrombosis, acute heart failure, arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, ischemic stroke, and cardiovascular (CV) death.<br/><br/>[[{"fid":"217939","view_mode":"medstat_image_flush_left","fields":{"format":"medstat_image_flush_left","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"","field_file_image_credit[und][0][value]":"lyosha_nazarenko/Thinkstock","field_file_image_caption[und][0][value]":""},"type":"media","attributes":{"class":"media-element file-medstat_image_flush_left"}}]]Cochairpersons Sigrun Halvorsen, MD, PhD, and Julinda Mehilli, MD, presented highlights from the guidelines at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology and the document was simultaneously published online in the <a href="https://academic.oup.com/eurheartj/advance-article/doi/10.1093/eurheartj/ehac270/6675076?login=false">European Heart Journal</a>. <br/><br/>The document classifies noncardiac surgery into three levels of 30-day risk of CV death, MI, or stroke. Low (&lt; 1%) risk includes eye or thyroid surgery; intermediate (1%-5%) risk includes knee or hip replacement or renal transplant; and high (&gt; 5%) risk includes aortic aneurysm, lung transplant, or pancreatic or bladder cancer surgery (see more examples below).<br/><br/>It classifies patients as low risk if they are younger than 65 without CV disease or CV risk factors (smoking, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, family history); intermediate risk if they are 65 or older or have CV risk factors; and high risk if they have CVD.  <br/><br/>In an interview, Dr. Halvorsen, professor in cardiology, University of Oslo, zeroed in on three important revisions:<br/><br/>First, recommendations for preoperative ECG and biomarkers are more specific, he noted.<br/><br/>The guidelines advise that before intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery, in patients who have known CVD, CV risk factors (including age 65 or older), or symptoms suggestive of CVD:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>It is recommended to obtain a preoperative 12-lead ECG (class I).</li> <li>It is recommended to measure high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTn T) or high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I (hs-cTn I). It is also recommended to measure these biomarkers at 24 hours and 48 hours post surgery (class I).</li> <li>It should be considered to measure B-type natriuretic peptide or N-terminal of the prohormone BNP (NT-proBNP).</li> </ul> <p>However, for low-risk patients undergoing low- and intermediate-risk noncardiac surgery, it is not recommended to routinely obtain preoperative ECG, hs-cTn T/I, or BNP/NT-proBNP concentrations (class III).<br/><br/>Troponins have a stronger class I recommendation, compared with the IIA recommendation for BNP, because they are useful for preoperative risk stratification and for diagnosis of PMI, Dr. Halvorsen explained. “Patients receive painkillers after surgery and may have no pain,” she noted, but they may have PMI, which has a bad prognosis.<br/><br/>Second, the guidelines recommend that “all patients should stop smoking 4 weeks before noncardiac surgery [class I],” she noted. Clinicians should also “measure hemoglobin, and if the patient is anemic, treat the anemia.”<br/><br/>Third, the sections on antithrombotic treatment have been significantly revised. “Bridging – stopping an oral antithrombotic drug and switching to a subcutaneous or IV drug – has been common,” Dr. Halvorsen said, “but recently we have new evidence that in most cases that increases the risk of bleeding.”<br/><br/>“We are [now] much more restrictive with respect to bridging” with unfractionated heparin or low-molecular-weight heparin, she said. “We recommend against bridging in patients with low to moderate thrombotic risk,” and bridging should only be considered in patients with mechanical prosthetic heart valves or with very high thrombotic risk.<br/><br/></p> <h2>More preoperative recommendations </h2> <p>In the guideline overview session at the congress, Dr. Halverson highlighted some of the new recommendations for preoperative risk assessment.  </p> <p>If time allows, it is recommended to optimize guideline-recommended treatment of CVD and control of CV risk factors including blood pressure, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, before noncardiac surgery (class I).<br/><br/>Patients commonly have “murmurs, chest pain, dyspnea, and edema that may suggest severe CVD, but may also be caused by noncardiac disease,” she noted. The guidelines state that “for patients with a newly detected murmur and symptoms or signs of CVD, transthoracic echocardiography is recommended before noncardiac surgery (class I).<br/><br/>“Many studies have been performed to try to find out if initiation of specific drugs before surgery could reduce the risk of complications,” Dr. Halvorsen noted. However, few have shown any benefit and “the question of presurgery initiation of beta-blockers has been greatly debated,” she said. “We have again reviewed the literature and concluded ‘Routine initiation of beta-blockers perioperatively is not recommended (class IIIA).’ “<br/><br/>“We adhere to the guidelines on acute and chronic coronary syndrome recommending 6-12 months of dual antiplatelet treatment as a standard before elective surgery,” she said. “However, in case of time-sensitive surgery, the duration of that treatment can be shortened down to a minimum of 1 month after elective PCI and a minimum of 3 months after PCI and ACS.”<br/><br/></p> <h2>Patients with specific types of CVD </h2> <p>Dr. Mehilli, a professor at Landshut-Achdorf (Germany) Hospital, highlighted some new guideline recommendations for patients who have specific types of cardiovascular disease.</p> <p><strong>Coronary artery disease (CAD).</strong> “For chronic coronary syndrome, a cardiac workup is recommended only for patients undergoing intermediate risk or high-risk noncardiac surgery.”<br/><br/>“Stress imaging should be considered before any high risk, noncardiac surgery in asymptomatic patients with poor functional capacity and prior PCI or coronary artery bypass graft (new recommendation, class IIa).”<br/><br/><strong>Mitral valve regurgitation.</strong> For patients undergoing scheduled noncardiac surgery, who remain symptomatic despite guideline-directed medical treatment for mitral valve regurgitation (including resynchronization and myocardial revascularization), consider a valve intervention – either transcatheter or surgical – before noncardiac surgery in eligible patients with acceptable procedural risk (new recommendation).<br/><br/><strong>Cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED).</strong> For high-risk patients with CIEDs undergoing noncardiac surgery with high probability of electromagnetic interference, a CIED checkup and necessary reprogramming immediately before the procedure should be considered (new recommendation).<br/><br/><strong>Arrhythmias.</strong> “I want only to stress,” Dr. Mehilli said, “in patients with atrial fibrillation with acute or worsening hemodynamic instability undergoing noncardiac surgery, an emergency electrical cardioversion is recommended (class I).”<br/><br/><strong>Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and abdominal aortic aneurysm.</strong> For these patients “we do not recommend a routine referral for a cardiac workup. But we recommend it for patients with poor functional capacity or with significant risk factors or symptoms (new recommendations).”<br/><br/><strong>Chronic arterial hypertension.</strong> “We have modified the recommendation, recommending avoidance of large perioperative fluctuations in blood pressure, and we do not recommend deferring noncardiac surgery in patients with stage 1 or 2 hypertension,” she said.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Postoperative cardiovascular complications </h2> <p>The most frequent postoperative cardiovascular complication is PMI, Dr. Mehilli noted.</p> <p>“In the BASEL-PMI registry, the incidence of this complication around intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery was up to 15% among patients older than 65 years or with a history of CAD or PAD, which makes this kind of complication really important to prevent, to assess, and to know how to treat.”<br/><br/>“It is recommended to have a high awareness for perioperative cardiovascular complications, combined with surveillance for PMI in patients undergoing intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgery” based on serial measurements of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin.<br/><br/>The guidelines define PMI as “an increase in the delta of high-sensitivity troponin more than the upper level of normal,” Dr. Mehilli said. “It’s different from the one used in a rule-in algorithm for non-STEMI acute coronary syndrome.”<br/><br/>Postoperative atrial fibrillation (AFib) is observed in 2%-30% of noncardiac surgery patients in different registries, particularly in patients undergoing intermediate or high-risk noncardiac surgery, she noted.<br/><br/>“We propose an algorithm on how to prevent and treat this complication. I want to highlight that in patients with hemodynamic unstable postoperative AF[ib], an emergency cardioversion is indicated. For the others, a rate control with the target heart rate of less than 110 beats per minute is indicated.”<br/><br/>In patients with postoperative AFib, long-term oral anticoagulation therapy should be considered in all patients at risk for stroke, considering the anticipated net clinical benefit of oral anticoagulation therapy as well as informed patient preference (new recommendations).<br/><br/>Routine use of beta-blockers to prevent postoperative AFib in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery is not recommended.<br/><br/>The document also covers the management of patients with kidney disease, diabetes, cancer, obesity, and COVID-19. In general, elective noncardiac surgery should be postponed after a patient has COVID-19, until he or she recovers completely, and coexisting conditions are optimized.<br/><br/>The guidelines are available from the ESC website in several formats: pocket guidelines, pocket guidelines smartphone app, guidelines slide set, essential messages, and the European Heart Journal article.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Noncardiac surgery risk categories </h2> <p>The guideline includes a table that classifies noncardiac surgeries into three groups, based on the associated 30-day risk of death, MI, or stroke:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>Low (&lt; 1%): breast, dental, eye, thyroid, and minor gynecologic, orthopedic, and urologic surgery.</li> <li>Intermediate (1%-5%): carotid surgery, endovascular aortic aneurysm repair, gallbladder surgery, head or neck surgery, hernia repair, peripheral arterial angioplasty, renal transplant, major gynecologic, orthopedic, or neurologic (hip or spine) surgery, or urologic surgery</li> <li>High (&gt; 5%): aortic and major vascular surgery (including aortic aneurysm), bladder removal (usually as a result of cancer), limb amputation, lung or liver transplant, pancreatic surgery, or perforated bowel repair.</li> </ul> <p>The guidelines were endorsed by the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care. The guideline authors reported numerous disclosures.</p> <p> <em>A version of this article first appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/980806">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Add AFib to noncardiac surgery risk evaluation: New support

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Mon, 06/27/2022 - 09:35

Practice has gone back and forth on whether atrial fibrillation (AFib) should be considered in the preoperative cardiovascular risk (CV) evaluation of patients slated for noncardiac surgery, and the Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI), currently widely used as an assessment tool, doesn’t include the arrhythmia.

But consideration of preexisting AFib along with the RCRI predicted 30-day mortality more sharply than the RCRI alone in an analysis of data covering several million patients slated for such procedures.

ECG_Electrocardiogram_web.jpg


Indeed, AFib emerged as a significant, independent risk factor for a number of bad postoperative outcomes. Mortality within a month of the procedure climbed about 30% for patients with AFib before the noncardiac surgery. Their 30-day risks for stroke and for heart failure hospitalization went up similarly.

The addition of AFib to the RCRI significantly improved its ability to discriminate 30-day postoperative risk levels regardless of age, sex, and type of noncardiac surgery, Amgad Mentias, MD, Cleveland Clinic, told this news organization. And “it was able to correctly up-classify patients to high risk, if AFib was there, and it was able to down-classify some patients to lower risk if it wasn’t there.”

“I think [the findings] are convincing evidence that atrial fib should at least be part of the thought process for the surgical team and the medical team taking care of the patient,” said Dr. Mentias, who is senior author on the study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, with lead author Sameer Prasada, MD, also of the Cleveland Clinic.

The results “call for incorporating AFib as a risk factor in perioperative risk scores for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality,” the published report states.

Supraventricular arrhythmias had been part of the Goldman Risk Index once widely used preoperatively to assess cardiac risk before practice adopted the RCRI in the past decade, observe Anne B. Curtis, MD, and Sai Krishna C. Korada, MD, University at Buffalo, New York, in an accompanying editorial.

The current findings “demonstrate improved prediction of adverse postsurgical outcomes” from supplementing the RCRI with AFib, they write. Given associations between preexisting AFib and serious cardiac events, “it is time to ‘re-revise’ the RCRI and acknowledge the importance of AFib in predicting adverse outcomes” after noncardiac surgery.

The new findings, however, aren’t all straightforward. In one result that remains a bit of a head-scratcher, postoperative risk of myocardial infarction (MI) in patients with preexisting AFib went in the opposite direction of risk for death and other CV outcomes, falling by almost 20%.

That is “hard to explain with the available data,” the report states, but “the use of anticoagulation, whether oral or parenteral (as a bridge therapy in the perioperative period), is a plausible explanation” given the frequent role of thrombosis in triggering MIs.

Consistent with such a mechanism, the group argues, the MI risk reduction was seen primarily among patients with AFib and a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or higher – that is, those at highest risk for stroke and therefore most likely to be on oral anticoagulation. The MI risk reduction wasn’t seen in such patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 0 or 1.

“I think that’s part of the explanation, that anticoagulation can reduce risk of MI. But it’s not the whole explanation,” Dr. Mentias said in an interview. If it were the sole mechanism, he said, then the same oral anticoagulation that protected against MI should have also cut the postoperative stroke risk. Yet that risk climbed 40% among patients with preexisting AFib.

The analysis started with 8.6 million Medicare patients with planned noncardiac surgery, seen from 2015 to 2019, of whom 16.4% had preexisting AFib. Propensity matching for demographics, urgency and type of surgery, CHA2DS2-VASc score, and RCRI index created two cohorts for comparison: 1.13 million patients with and 1.92 million without preexisting AFib.  

Preexisting AFib was associated with a higher 30-day risk for death from any cause, the primary endpoint being 8.3% versus 5.8% for those without such AFib (P < .001), for an odds ratio of 1.31 (95% confidence interval, 1.30-1.32).

Corresponding 30-day ORs for other events, all significant at P < .001, were:  

  • 1.31 (95% CI, 1.30-1.33) for heart failure
  • 1.40 (95% CI, 1.37-1.43) for stroke
  • 1.59 (95% CI, 1.43-1.75) for systemic embolism
  • 1.14 (95% CI, 1.13-1.16) for major bleeding  
  • 0.81 (95% CI, 0.79-0.82) for MI

Those with preexisting AFib also had longer hospitalizations at a median 5 days, compared with 4 days for those without such AFib (P < .001).

The study has the limitations of most any retrospective cohort analysis. Other limitations, the report notes, include lack of information on any antiarrhythmic meds given during hospitalization or type of AFib.

For example, AFib that is permanent – compared with paroxysmal or persistent – may be associated with more atrial fibrosis, greater atrial dilatation, “and probably higher pressures inside the heart,” Dr. Mentias observed.

“That’s not always the case, but that’s the notion. So presumably people with persistent or permanent atrial fib would have more advanced heart disease, and that could imply more risk. But we did not have that kind of data.”

Dr. Mentias and Dr. Prasada report no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Curtis discloses serving on advisory boards for Abbott, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sanofi, and Milestone Pharmaceuticals; receiving honoraria for speaking from Medtronic and Zoll; and serving on a data-monitoring board for Medtronic. Dr. Korada reports he has no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Practice has gone back and forth on whether atrial fibrillation (AFib) should be considered in the preoperative cardiovascular risk (CV) evaluation of patients slated for noncardiac surgery, and the Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI), currently widely used as an assessment tool, doesn’t include the arrhythmia.

But consideration of preexisting AFib along with the RCRI predicted 30-day mortality more sharply than the RCRI alone in an analysis of data covering several million patients slated for such procedures.

ECG_Electrocardiogram_web.jpg


Indeed, AFib emerged as a significant, independent risk factor for a number of bad postoperative outcomes. Mortality within a month of the procedure climbed about 30% for patients with AFib before the noncardiac surgery. Their 30-day risks for stroke and for heart failure hospitalization went up similarly.

The addition of AFib to the RCRI significantly improved its ability to discriminate 30-day postoperative risk levels regardless of age, sex, and type of noncardiac surgery, Amgad Mentias, MD, Cleveland Clinic, told this news organization. And “it was able to correctly up-classify patients to high risk, if AFib was there, and it was able to down-classify some patients to lower risk if it wasn’t there.”

“I think [the findings] are convincing evidence that atrial fib should at least be part of the thought process for the surgical team and the medical team taking care of the patient,” said Dr. Mentias, who is senior author on the study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, with lead author Sameer Prasada, MD, also of the Cleveland Clinic.

The results “call for incorporating AFib as a risk factor in perioperative risk scores for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality,” the published report states.

Supraventricular arrhythmias had been part of the Goldman Risk Index once widely used preoperatively to assess cardiac risk before practice adopted the RCRI in the past decade, observe Anne B. Curtis, MD, and Sai Krishna C. Korada, MD, University at Buffalo, New York, in an accompanying editorial.

The current findings “demonstrate improved prediction of adverse postsurgical outcomes” from supplementing the RCRI with AFib, they write. Given associations between preexisting AFib and serious cardiac events, “it is time to ‘re-revise’ the RCRI and acknowledge the importance of AFib in predicting adverse outcomes” after noncardiac surgery.

The new findings, however, aren’t all straightforward. In one result that remains a bit of a head-scratcher, postoperative risk of myocardial infarction (MI) in patients with preexisting AFib went in the opposite direction of risk for death and other CV outcomes, falling by almost 20%.

That is “hard to explain with the available data,” the report states, but “the use of anticoagulation, whether oral or parenteral (as a bridge therapy in the perioperative period), is a plausible explanation” given the frequent role of thrombosis in triggering MIs.

Consistent with such a mechanism, the group argues, the MI risk reduction was seen primarily among patients with AFib and a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or higher – that is, those at highest risk for stroke and therefore most likely to be on oral anticoagulation. The MI risk reduction wasn’t seen in such patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 0 or 1.

“I think that’s part of the explanation, that anticoagulation can reduce risk of MI. But it’s not the whole explanation,” Dr. Mentias said in an interview. If it were the sole mechanism, he said, then the same oral anticoagulation that protected against MI should have also cut the postoperative stroke risk. Yet that risk climbed 40% among patients with preexisting AFib.

The analysis started with 8.6 million Medicare patients with planned noncardiac surgery, seen from 2015 to 2019, of whom 16.4% had preexisting AFib. Propensity matching for demographics, urgency and type of surgery, CHA2DS2-VASc score, and RCRI index created two cohorts for comparison: 1.13 million patients with and 1.92 million without preexisting AFib.  

Preexisting AFib was associated with a higher 30-day risk for death from any cause, the primary endpoint being 8.3% versus 5.8% for those without such AFib (P < .001), for an odds ratio of 1.31 (95% confidence interval, 1.30-1.32).

Corresponding 30-day ORs for other events, all significant at P < .001, were:  

  • 1.31 (95% CI, 1.30-1.33) for heart failure
  • 1.40 (95% CI, 1.37-1.43) for stroke
  • 1.59 (95% CI, 1.43-1.75) for systemic embolism
  • 1.14 (95% CI, 1.13-1.16) for major bleeding  
  • 0.81 (95% CI, 0.79-0.82) for MI

Those with preexisting AFib also had longer hospitalizations at a median 5 days, compared with 4 days for those without such AFib (P < .001).

The study has the limitations of most any retrospective cohort analysis. Other limitations, the report notes, include lack of information on any antiarrhythmic meds given during hospitalization or type of AFib.

For example, AFib that is permanent – compared with paroxysmal or persistent – may be associated with more atrial fibrosis, greater atrial dilatation, “and probably higher pressures inside the heart,” Dr. Mentias observed.

“That’s not always the case, but that’s the notion. So presumably people with persistent or permanent atrial fib would have more advanced heart disease, and that could imply more risk. But we did not have that kind of data.”

Dr. Mentias and Dr. Prasada report no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Curtis discloses serving on advisory boards for Abbott, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sanofi, and Milestone Pharmaceuticals; receiving honoraria for speaking from Medtronic and Zoll; and serving on a data-monitoring board for Medtronic. Dr. Korada reports he has no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Practice has gone back and forth on whether atrial fibrillation (AFib) should be considered in the preoperative cardiovascular risk (CV) evaluation of patients slated for noncardiac surgery, and the Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI), currently widely used as an assessment tool, doesn’t include the arrhythmia.

But consideration of preexisting AFib along with the RCRI predicted 30-day mortality more sharply than the RCRI alone in an analysis of data covering several million patients slated for such procedures.

ECG_Electrocardiogram_web.jpg


Indeed, AFib emerged as a significant, independent risk factor for a number of bad postoperative outcomes. Mortality within a month of the procedure climbed about 30% for patients with AFib before the noncardiac surgery. Their 30-day risks for stroke and for heart failure hospitalization went up similarly.

The addition of AFib to the RCRI significantly improved its ability to discriminate 30-day postoperative risk levels regardless of age, sex, and type of noncardiac surgery, Amgad Mentias, MD, Cleveland Clinic, told this news organization. And “it was able to correctly up-classify patients to high risk, if AFib was there, and it was able to down-classify some patients to lower risk if it wasn’t there.”

“I think [the findings] are convincing evidence that atrial fib should at least be part of the thought process for the surgical team and the medical team taking care of the patient,” said Dr. Mentias, who is senior author on the study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, with lead author Sameer Prasada, MD, also of the Cleveland Clinic.

The results “call for incorporating AFib as a risk factor in perioperative risk scores for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality,” the published report states.

Supraventricular arrhythmias had been part of the Goldman Risk Index once widely used preoperatively to assess cardiac risk before practice adopted the RCRI in the past decade, observe Anne B. Curtis, MD, and Sai Krishna C. Korada, MD, University at Buffalo, New York, in an accompanying editorial.

The current findings “demonstrate improved prediction of adverse postsurgical outcomes” from supplementing the RCRI with AFib, they write. Given associations between preexisting AFib and serious cardiac events, “it is time to ‘re-revise’ the RCRI and acknowledge the importance of AFib in predicting adverse outcomes” after noncardiac surgery.

The new findings, however, aren’t all straightforward. In one result that remains a bit of a head-scratcher, postoperative risk of myocardial infarction (MI) in patients with preexisting AFib went in the opposite direction of risk for death and other CV outcomes, falling by almost 20%.

That is “hard to explain with the available data,” the report states, but “the use of anticoagulation, whether oral or parenteral (as a bridge therapy in the perioperative period), is a plausible explanation” given the frequent role of thrombosis in triggering MIs.

Consistent with such a mechanism, the group argues, the MI risk reduction was seen primarily among patients with AFib and a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or higher – that is, those at highest risk for stroke and therefore most likely to be on oral anticoagulation. The MI risk reduction wasn’t seen in such patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 0 or 1.

“I think that’s part of the explanation, that anticoagulation can reduce risk of MI. But it’s not the whole explanation,” Dr. Mentias said in an interview. If it were the sole mechanism, he said, then the same oral anticoagulation that protected against MI should have also cut the postoperative stroke risk. Yet that risk climbed 40% among patients with preexisting AFib.

The analysis started with 8.6 million Medicare patients with planned noncardiac surgery, seen from 2015 to 2019, of whom 16.4% had preexisting AFib. Propensity matching for demographics, urgency and type of surgery, CHA2DS2-VASc score, and RCRI index created two cohorts for comparison: 1.13 million patients with and 1.92 million without preexisting AFib.  

Preexisting AFib was associated with a higher 30-day risk for death from any cause, the primary endpoint being 8.3% versus 5.8% for those without such AFib (P < .001), for an odds ratio of 1.31 (95% confidence interval, 1.30-1.32).

Corresponding 30-day ORs for other events, all significant at P < .001, were:  

  • 1.31 (95% CI, 1.30-1.33) for heart failure
  • 1.40 (95% CI, 1.37-1.43) for stroke
  • 1.59 (95% CI, 1.43-1.75) for systemic embolism
  • 1.14 (95% CI, 1.13-1.16) for major bleeding  
  • 0.81 (95% CI, 0.79-0.82) for MI

Those with preexisting AFib also had longer hospitalizations at a median 5 days, compared with 4 days for those without such AFib (P < .001).

The study has the limitations of most any retrospective cohort analysis. Other limitations, the report notes, include lack of information on any antiarrhythmic meds given during hospitalization or type of AFib.

For example, AFib that is permanent – compared with paroxysmal or persistent – may be associated with more atrial fibrosis, greater atrial dilatation, “and probably higher pressures inside the heart,” Dr. Mentias observed.

“That’s not always the case, but that’s the notion. So presumably people with persistent or permanent atrial fib would have more advanced heart disease, and that could imply more risk. But we did not have that kind of data.”

Dr. Mentias and Dr. Prasada report no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Curtis discloses serving on advisory boards for Abbott, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sanofi, and Milestone Pharmaceuticals; receiving honoraria for speaking from Medtronic and Zoll; and serving on a data-monitoring board for Medtronic. Dr. Korada reports he has no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>Practice has gone back and forth on whether atrial fibrillation (AFib) should be considered in the preoperative cardiovascular risk (CV) evaluation of patients </metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage>266847</teaserImage> <teaser>Preexisting atrial fibrillation should again be part of pre–noncardiac surgery cardiac risk assessment, argues a new report.</teaser> <title>Add AFib to noncardiac surgery risk evaluation: New support</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>card</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>chph</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>mdemed</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> <journalTitle/> <journalFullTitle/> <copyrightStatement/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>mdsurg</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> <journalTitle/> <journalFullTitle/> <copyrightStatement>2018 Frontline Medical Communications Inc.,</copyrightStatement> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">5</term> <term>6</term> <term>58877</term> <term>52226</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">27970</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">185</term> <term>236</term> <term>301</term> <term>193</term> <term>173</term> <term>304</term> <term>194</term> <term>328</term> <term>187</term> <term>348</term> <term>336</term> <term>349</term> <term>337</term> <term>212</term> <term>351</term> <term>352</term> <term>220</term> <term>338</term> <term>227</term> <term>237</term> <term>258</term> <term>27442</term> <term>263</term> <term>264</term> <term>267</term> <term>331</term> <term>290</term> <term>39718</term> <term>339</term> <term>295</term> <term>298</term> <term>300</term> <term>340</term> <term>341</term> <term>342</term> <term>312</term> </topics> <links> <link> <itemClass qcode="ninat:picture"/> <altRep contenttype="image/jpeg">images/2400e92a.jpg</altRep> <description role="drol:caption"/> <description role="drol:credit">enot-poloskun/Getty Images</description> </link> </links> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Add AFib to noncardiac surgery risk evaluation: New support</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>Practice has gone back and forth on whether atrial fibrillation (AFib) should be considered in the preoperative cardiovascular risk (CV) evaluation of patients slated for noncardiac surgery, and the Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI), currently widely used as an assessment tool, doesn’t include the arrhythmia.</p> <p>But consideration of preexisting AFib along with the RCRI predicted 30-day mortality more sharply than the RCRI alone in an analysis of data covering several million patients slated for such procedures.[[{"fid":"266847","view_mode":"medstat_image_flush_left","fields":{"format":"medstat_image_flush_left","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"Image of an electrocardiogram","field_file_image_credit[und][0][value]":"enot-poloskun/Getty Images","field_file_image_caption[und][0][value]":""},"type":"media","attributes":{"class":"media-element file-medstat_image_flush_left"}}]]<br/><br/>Indeed, AFib emerged as a significant, independent risk factor for a number of bad postoperative outcomes. Mortality within a month of the procedure climbed about 30% for patients with AFib before the noncardiac surgery. Their 30-day risks for stroke and for heart failure hospitalization went up similarly.<br/><br/>The addition of AFib to the RCRI significantly improved its ability to discriminate 30-day postoperative risk levels regardless of age, sex, and type of noncardiac surgery, Amgad Mentias, MD, Cleveland Clinic, told this news organization. And “it was able to correctly up-classify patients to high risk, if AFib was there, and it was able to down-classify some patients to lower risk if it wasn’t there.”<br/><br/>“I think [the findings] are convincing evidence that atrial fib should at least be part of the thought process for the surgical team and the medical team taking care of the patient,” said Dr. Mentias, who is senior author on the <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2022.04.021">study</a> published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, with lead author Sameer Prasada, MD, also of the Cleveland Clinic.<br/><br/>The results “call for incorporating AFib as a risk factor in perioperative risk scores for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality,” the published report states.<br/><br/>Supraventricular arrhythmias had been part of the <a href="https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejm197710202971601">Goldman Risk Index</a> once widely used preoperatively to assess cardiac risk before practice adopted the RCRI in the past decade, observe Anne B. Curtis, MD, and Sai Krishna C. Korada, MD, University at Buffalo, New York, in an <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2022.04.020">accompanying</a> editorial.<br/><br/>The current findings “demonstrate improved prediction of adverse postsurgical outcomes” from supplementing the RCRI with AFib, they write. Given associations between preexisting AFib and serious cardiac events, “it is time to ‘re-revise’ the RCRI and acknowledge the importance of AFib in predicting adverse outcomes” after noncardiac surgery.<br/><br/>The new findings, however, aren’t all straightforward. In one result that remains a bit of a head-scratcher, postoperative risk of myocardial infarction (MI) in patients with preexisting AFib went in the opposite direction of risk for death and other CV outcomes, falling by almost 20%.<br/><br/>That is “hard to explain with the available data,” the report states, but “the use of anticoagulation, whether oral or parenteral (as a bridge therapy in the perioperative period), is a plausible explanation” given the frequent role of thrombosis in triggering MIs.<br/><br/>Consistent with such a mechanism, the group argues, the MI risk reduction was seen primarily among patients with AFib and a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or higher – that is, those at highest risk for stroke and therefore most likely to be on oral anticoagulation. The MI risk reduction wasn’t seen in such patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 0 or 1.<br/><br/>“I think that’s part of the explanation, that anticoagulation can reduce risk of MI. But it’s not the whole explanation,” Dr. Mentias said in an interview. If it were the sole mechanism, he said, then the same oral anticoagulation that protected against MI should have also cut the postoperative stroke risk. Yet that risk climbed 40% among patients with preexisting AFib.<br/><br/>The analysis started with 8.6 million Medicare patients with planned noncardiac surgery, seen from 2015 to 2019, of whom 16.4% had preexisting AFib. Propensity matching for demographics, urgency and type of surgery, CHA2DS2-VASc score, and RCRI index created two cohorts for comparison: 1.13 million patients with and 1.92 million without preexisting AFib.  <br/><br/>Preexisting AFib was associated with a higher 30-day risk for death from any cause, the primary endpoint being 8.3% versus 5.8% for those without such AFib (<em>P</em> &lt; .001), for an odds ratio of 1.31 (95% confidence interval, 1.30-1.32).<br/><br/>Corresponding 30-day ORs for other events, all significant at <em>P</em> &lt; .001, were:  </p> <ul class="body"> <li>1.31 (95% CI, 1.30-1.33) for heart failure</li> <li>1.40 (95% CI, 1.37-1.43) for stroke</li> <li>1.59 (95% CI, 1.43-1.75) for systemic embolism</li> <li>1.14 (95% CI, 1.13-1.16) for major bleeding  </li> <li>0.81 (95% CI, 0.79-0.82) for MI</li> </ul> <p>Those with preexisting AFib also had longer hospitalizations at a median 5 days, compared with 4 days for those without such AFib (<em>P</em> &lt; .001).<br/><br/>The study has the limitations of most any retrospective cohort analysis. Other limitations, the report notes, include lack of information on any antiarrhythmic meds given during hospitalization or type of AFib.<br/><br/>For example, AFib that is permanent – compared with paroxysmal or persistent – may be associated with more atrial fibrosis, greater atrial dilatation, “and probably higher pressures inside the heart,” Dr. Mentias observed.<br/><br/>“That’s not always the case, but that’s the notion. So presumably people with persistent or permanent atrial fib would have more advanced heart disease, and that could imply more risk. But we did not have that kind of data.”<br/><br/>Dr. Mentias and Dr. Prasada report no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Curtis discloses serving on advisory boards for Abbott, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sanofi, and Milestone Pharmaceuticals; receiving honoraria for speaking from Medtronic and Zoll; and serving on a data-monitoring board for Medtronic. Dr. Korada reports he has no relevant financial relationships.<span class="end"/></p> <p> <em>A version of this article first appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/975926">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Lp(a) molar concentration flags CVD, diabetes risk

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Fri, 12/13/2019 - 13:25

Lipoprotein(a) molar concentration, rather than apolipoprotein(a) size, appears to be the factor that drives lipoprotein(a)-based cardiovascular disease, according to research published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The causal association between lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), and cardiovascular disease has been previously established, but exactly what attribute of Lp(a) is related to cardiovascular risk is not known, Daniel F. Gudbjartsson, PhD, of deCODE genetics and the University of Iceland in Reykjavik, and colleagues wrote in their study. The researchers set out to determine whether Lp(a) molar concentration or apolipoprotein(a), or apo(a), size affects cardiovascular risk. In addition, Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues examined the relationship between Lp(a) and type 2 diabetes. While low levels of Lp(a) have been linked to type 2 diabetes, the researchers sought to examine whether low Lp(a) molar concentration levels were also associated with type 2 diabetes risk.

“With Lp(a)-lowering drugs being developed, it is important to understand which attributes of Lp(a) best capture the cardiovascular risk and the consequences of Lp(a) lowering,” noted Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues.

Using Mendelian randomization, the researchers assessed Lp(a) molar concentration and kringle IV type 2 (KIV-2) repeat sequence variants to determine a causal relationship between both variants and disease risk. Lp(a) molar concentration serum samples were measured using particle-enhanced turbidimetric immunoassay, while KIV-2 repeats were genotyped with real-time polymerase chain reaction.

Overall, 143,087 participants from Iceland had their genetic information analyzed; of these, 17,715 participants had coronary artery disease, and 8,734 had type 2 diabetes. Lp(a) molecular concentration was analyzed in 12,137 participants and genetically imputed into 130,950 Icelanders, and KIV-2 repeats were estimated in 22,771 Icelanders and genetically imputed into 120,316 Icelanders.

Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues found there was a dose-dependent association between Lp(a) molar concentration and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD), peripheral artery disease, aortic valve stenosis, heart failure, and lifespan. In participants in whom Lp(a) molar concentration was at the 79th percentile (50 units of molarity [nM]), the odds ratio was 1.11, and for those in the 99th percentile (250 nM), there was an odds ratio of 2.01 when compared with participants with a median Lp(a) molar concentration of 14 nM. “Lp(a) molar concentration fully explained the Lp(a) association with CAD, and there was no residual association with apo(a) size,” the researchers said.

[embed:render:related:node:203834]

Participants who were not at increased risk for CAD included those with few KIV-2 repeats and participants with the splice variant G4925A. “This suggested that risk prediction based on Lp(a) should only depend on molar concentration and that treatment of Lp(a) should focus on lowering the molar concentration in subjects with high Lp(a) levels, regardless of the apo(a) size distribution,” Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues wrote.

Among participants with type 2 diabetes examined, the 10% of participants with Lp(a) molar concentrations of less than 3.5 nM were at the highest risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

In an accompanying editorial, Benoit J. Arsenault, PhD, of the Quebec Heart and Lung Institute, said that the findings of an association between Lp(a) concentration and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases (ASCVD) from Gudbjartsson et al. are important, particularly if they can be replicated in more diverse populations (doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.06.083). “Investigating the association between Lp(a) levels, apo(a) isoform size, and ASCVD risk in different populations is important because the distribution of Lp(a) levels appears to be different across ethnic groups,” he said.

Despite the link between absolute Lp(a) concentrations and cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular outcome trials will need be conducted, Dr. Arsenault noted.

“In the post-statin and post-genomic era, finding much needed therapeutic targets for residual cardiovascular risk can be compared to a gold-digging expedition. Like a map to the location of the gold, GWAS [genome-wide association studies] and Mendelian randomization studies are consistently pointing us in the direction of Lp(a),” he said. “It is time to coordinate our efforts to dig where the map told us, to see once and for all if we will find the golden target of residual cardiovascular risk that we are hoping for and to give hope to high-risk patients with elevated Lp(a) levels.”

Dr. Gudbjartsson and 19 other authors reported being employees of deCODE genetics, owned by Amgen, which is developing Lp(a)-lowering drugs related to the study findings. The other authors reported no relevant conflict of interest. Dr. Arsenault reported being supported by the Fonds de recherche du Québec: Santé and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; has received research funding from Pfizer, Merck, and Ionis; and was a former consultant for Pfizer and Novartis.

SOURCE: Gudbjartsson DF et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.10.019.

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Lipoprotein(a) molar concentration, rather than apolipoprotein(a) size, appears to be the factor that drives lipoprotein(a)-based cardiovascular disease, according to research published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The causal association between lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), and cardiovascular disease has been previously established, but exactly what attribute of Lp(a) is related to cardiovascular risk is not known, Daniel F. Gudbjartsson, PhD, of deCODE genetics and the University of Iceland in Reykjavik, and colleagues wrote in their study. The researchers set out to determine whether Lp(a) molar concentration or apolipoprotein(a), or apo(a), size affects cardiovascular risk. In addition, Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues examined the relationship between Lp(a) and type 2 diabetes. While low levels of Lp(a) have been linked to type 2 diabetes, the researchers sought to examine whether low Lp(a) molar concentration levels were also associated with type 2 diabetes risk.

“With Lp(a)-lowering drugs being developed, it is important to understand which attributes of Lp(a) best capture the cardiovascular risk and the consequences of Lp(a) lowering,” noted Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues.

Using Mendelian randomization, the researchers assessed Lp(a) molar concentration and kringle IV type 2 (KIV-2) repeat sequence variants to determine a causal relationship between both variants and disease risk. Lp(a) molar concentration serum samples were measured using particle-enhanced turbidimetric immunoassay, while KIV-2 repeats were genotyped with real-time polymerase chain reaction.

Overall, 143,087 participants from Iceland had their genetic information analyzed; of these, 17,715 participants had coronary artery disease, and 8,734 had type 2 diabetes. Lp(a) molecular concentration was analyzed in 12,137 participants and genetically imputed into 130,950 Icelanders, and KIV-2 repeats were estimated in 22,771 Icelanders and genetically imputed into 120,316 Icelanders.

Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues found there was a dose-dependent association between Lp(a) molar concentration and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD), peripheral artery disease, aortic valve stenosis, heart failure, and lifespan. In participants in whom Lp(a) molar concentration was at the 79th percentile (50 units of molarity [nM]), the odds ratio was 1.11, and for those in the 99th percentile (250 nM), there was an odds ratio of 2.01 when compared with participants with a median Lp(a) molar concentration of 14 nM. “Lp(a) molar concentration fully explained the Lp(a) association with CAD, and there was no residual association with apo(a) size,” the researchers said.

[embed:render:related:node:203834]

Participants who were not at increased risk for CAD included those with few KIV-2 repeats and participants with the splice variant G4925A. “This suggested that risk prediction based on Lp(a) should only depend on molar concentration and that treatment of Lp(a) should focus on lowering the molar concentration in subjects with high Lp(a) levels, regardless of the apo(a) size distribution,” Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues wrote.

Among participants with type 2 diabetes examined, the 10% of participants with Lp(a) molar concentrations of less than 3.5 nM were at the highest risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

In an accompanying editorial, Benoit J. Arsenault, PhD, of the Quebec Heart and Lung Institute, said that the findings of an association between Lp(a) concentration and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases (ASCVD) from Gudbjartsson et al. are important, particularly if they can be replicated in more diverse populations (doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.06.083). “Investigating the association between Lp(a) levels, apo(a) isoform size, and ASCVD risk in different populations is important because the distribution of Lp(a) levels appears to be different across ethnic groups,” he said.

Despite the link between absolute Lp(a) concentrations and cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular outcome trials will need be conducted, Dr. Arsenault noted.

“In the post-statin and post-genomic era, finding much needed therapeutic targets for residual cardiovascular risk can be compared to a gold-digging expedition. Like a map to the location of the gold, GWAS [genome-wide association studies] and Mendelian randomization studies are consistently pointing us in the direction of Lp(a),” he said. “It is time to coordinate our efforts to dig where the map told us, to see once and for all if we will find the golden target of residual cardiovascular risk that we are hoping for and to give hope to high-risk patients with elevated Lp(a) levels.”

Dr. Gudbjartsson and 19 other authors reported being employees of deCODE genetics, owned by Amgen, which is developing Lp(a)-lowering drugs related to the study findings. The other authors reported no relevant conflict of interest. Dr. Arsenault reported being supported by the Fonds de recherche du Québec: Santé and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; has received research funding from Pfizer, Merck, and Ionis; and was a former consultant for Pfizer and Novartis.

SOURCE: Gudbjartsson DF et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.10.019.

Lipoprotein(a) molar concentration, rather than apolipoprotein(a) size, appears to be the factor that drives lipoprotein(a)-based cardiovascular disease, according to research published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The causal association between lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), and cardiovascular disease has been previously established, but exactly what attribute of Lp(a) is related to cardiovascular risk is not known, Daniel F. Gudbjartsson, PhD, of deCODE genetics and the University of Iceland in Reykjavik, and colleagues wrote in their study. The researchers set out to determine whether Lp(a) molar concentration or apolipoprotein(a), or apo(a), size affects cardiovascular risk. In addition, Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues examined the relationship between Lp(a) and type 2 diabetes. While low levels of Lp(a) have been linked to type 2 diabetes, the researchers sought to examine whether low Lp(a) molar concentration levels were also associated with type 2 diabetes risk.

“With Lp(a)-lowering drugs being developed, it is important to understand which attributes of Lp(a) best capture the cardiovascular risk and the consequences of Lp(a) lowering,” noted Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues.

Using Mendelian randomization, the researchers assessed Lp(a) molar concentration and kringle IV type 2 (KIV-2) repeat sequence variants to determine a causal relationship between both variants and disease risk. Lp(a) molar concentration serum samples were measured using particle-enhanced turbidimetric immunoassay, while KIV-2 repeats were genotyped with real-time polymerase chain reaction.

Overall, 143,087 participants from Iceland had their genetic information analyzed; of these, 17,715 participants had coronary artery disease, and 8,734 had type 2 diabetes. Lp(a) molecular concentration was analyzed in 12,137 participants and genetically imputed into 130,950 Icelanders, and KIV-2 repeats were estimated in 22,771 Icelanders and genetically imputed into 120,316 Icelanders.

Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues found there was a dose-dependent association between Lp(a) molar concentration and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD), peripheral artery disease, aortic valve stenosis, heart failure, and lifespan. In participants in whom Lp(a) molar concentration was at the 79th percentile (50 units of molarity [nM]), the odds ratio was 1.11, and for those in the 99th percentile (250 nM), there was an odds ratio of 2.01 when compared with participants with a median Lp(a) molar concentration of 14 nM. “Lp(a) molar concentration fully explained the Lp(a) association with CAD, and there was no residual association with apo(a) size,” the researchers said.

[embed:render:related:node:203834]

Participants who were not at increased risk for CAD included those with few KIV-2 repeats and participants with the splice variant G4925A. “This suggested that risk prediction based on Lp(a) should only depend on molar concentration and that treatment of Lp(a) should focus on lowering the molar concentration in subjects with high Lp(a) levels, regardless of the apo(a) size distribution,” Dr. Gudbjartsson and colleagues wrote.

Among participants with type 2 diabetes examined, the 10% of participants with Lp(a) molar concentrations of less than 3.5 nM were at the highest risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

In an accompanying editorial, Benoit J. Arsenault, PhD, of the Quebec Heart and Lung Institute, said that the findings of an association between Lp(a) concentration and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases (ASCVD) from Gudbjartsson et al. are important, particularly if they can be replicated in more diverse populations (doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.06.083). “Investigating the association between Lp(a) levels, apo(a) isoform size, and ASCVD risk in different populations is important because the distribution of Lp(a) levels appears to be different across ethnic groups,” he said.

Despite the link between absolute Lp(a) concentrations and cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular outcome trials will need be conducted, Dr. Arsenault noted.

“In the post-statin and post-genomic era, finding much needed therapeutic targets for residual cardiovascular risk can be compared to a gold-digging expedition. Like a map to the location of the gold, GWAS [genome-wide association studies] and Mendelian randomization studies are consistently pointing us in the direction of Lp(a),” he said. “It is time to coordinate our efforts to dig where the map told us, to see once and for all if we will find the golden target of residual cardiovascular risk that we are hoping for and to give hope to high-risk patients with elevated Lp(a) levels.”

Dr. Gudbjartsson and 19 other authors reported being employees of deCODE genetics, owned by Amgen, which is developing Lp(a)-lowering drugs related to the study findings. The other authors reported no relevant conflict of interest. Dr. Arsenault reported being supported by the Fonds de recherche du Québec: Santé and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; has received research funding from Pfizer, Merck, and Ionis; and was a former consultant for Pfizer and Novartis.

SOURCE: Gudbjartsson DF et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.10.019.

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Key clinical point: Higher lipoprotein(a) molar concentration is linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, compared with apolipoprotein(a) size.

Major finding: There was a dose-dependent association between Lp(a) molar concentration and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD), peripheral artery disease, aortic valve stenosis, heart failure, and lifespan.

Study details: A case-control study of genetic information from 143,087 Icelandic participants.

Disclosures: Dr. Gudbjartsson and 19 other authors reported being employees of deCODE genetics, owned by Amgen, which is developing Lp(a)-lowering drugs related to the study findings. The other authors reported no relevant conflict of interest. Dr. Arsenault reported being supported by the Fonds de recherche du Québec: Santé and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; has received research funding from Pfizer, Merck, and Ionis; and was a former consultant for Pfizer and Novartis.

Source: Gudbjartsson DF et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.10.019.

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Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index predicts long-term outcomes in PAD

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Thu, 10/31/2019 - 10:09

 

– The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index proved to be an independent predictor of 5-year overall survival as well as the composite of major adverse cardiovascular and limb events in a prospective cohort study of 1,219 patients with peripheral artery disease, Yae Matsuo, MD, reported at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Matsuo_Yae_JAPAN_web.jpg
%3Cp%3EDr.%20Yae%20Matsuo%3C%2Fp%3E

The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI) is a score calculated with a formula based upon a patient’s height, serum albumin, and the ratio between ideal and actual body weight (Am J Clin Nutr. 2005 Oct;82(4):777-83). The GNRI tool has been shown to be an accurate prognosticator for clinical outcomes in patients on hemodialysis and those with heart failure. However, it’s predictive accuracy hasn’t been evaluated in patients with PAD, according to Dr. Matsuo, a cardiologist at Kitakanto Cardiovascular Hospital in Shibukawa, Japan.

“The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index is simple to calculate – so easy – and I think it’s a better predictor than BMI,” she said.

Fifty-six percent of the PAD patients had a GNRI score greater than 98, indicative of no increased risk of malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies. Their 5-year overall survival rate was 81%, compared with 62% in patients with a score of 92-98, 40% in those with a score of 82-91, and 23% with a score of less than 82. Other independent predictors of overall survival in multivariate analysis were age, estimated glomerular filtration rate, ankle brachial index, and C-reactive protein level.

A GNRI score above 98 was also predictive of significantly lower 5-year risk of both major adverse cardiovascular events and the composite of major adverse cardiovascular and limb events than in patients with a score of 98 or less.

The key remaining unanswered question is whether providing timely nutritional support to PAD patients with a low GNRI score will result in improved overall and limb survival and other outcomes.

Dr. Matsuo reported having no financial conflicts.

SOURCE: Matsuo Y. ESC CONGRESS 2019. Abstract P1956.

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– The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index proved to be an independent predictor of 5-year overall survival as well as the composite of major adverse cardiovascular and limb events in a prospective cohort study of 1,219 patients with peripheral artery disease, Yae Matsuo, MD, reported at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Matsuo_Yae_JAPAN_web.jpg
%3Cp%3EDr.%20Yae%20Matsuo%3C%2Fp%3E

The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI) is a score calculated with a formula based upon a patient’s height, serum albumin, and the ratio between ideal and actual body weight (Am J Clin Nutr. 2005 Oct;82(4):777-83). The GNRI tool has been shown to be an accurate prognosticator for clinical outcomes in patients on hemodialysis and those with heart failure. However, it’s predictive accuracy hasn’t been evaluated in patients with PAD, according to Dr. Matsuo, a cardiologist at Kitakanto Cardiovascular Hospital in Shibukawa, Japan.

“The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index is simple to calculate – so easy – and I think it’s a better predictor than BMI,” she said.

Fifty-six percent of the PAD patients had a GNRI score greater than 98, indicative of no increased risk of malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies. Their 5-year overall survival rate was 81%, compared with 62% in patients with a score of 92-98, 40% in those with a score of 82-91, and 23% with a score of less than 82. Other independent predictors of overall survival in multivariate analysis were age, estimated glomerular filtration rate, ankle brachial index, and C-reactive protein level.

A GNRI score above 98 was also predictive of significantly lower 5-year risk of both major adverse cardiovascular events and the composite of major adverse cardiovascular and limb events than in patients with a score of 98 or less.

The key remaining unanswered question is whether providing timely nutritional support to PAD patients with a low GNRI score will result in improved overall and limb survival and other outcomes.

Dr. Matsuo reported having no financial conflicts.

SOURCE: Matsuo Y. ESC CONGRESS 2019. Abstract P1956.

 

– The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index proved to be an independent predictor of 5-year overall survival as well as the composite of major adverse cardiovascular and limb events in a prospective cohort study of 1,219 patients with peripheral artery disease, Yae Matsuo, MD, reported at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Matsuo_Yae_JAPAN_web.jpg
%3Cp%3EDr.%20Yae%20Matsuo%3C%2Fp%3E

The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI) is a score calculated with a formula based upon a patient’s height, serum albumin, and the ratio between ideal and actual body weight (Am J Clin Nutr. 2005 Oct;82(4):777-83). The GNRI tool has been shown to be an accurate prognosticator for clinical outcomes in patients on hemodialysis and those with heart failure. However, it’s predictive accuracy hasn’t been evaluated in patients with PAD, according to Dr. Matsuo, a cardiologist at Kitakanto Cardiovascular Hospital in Shibukawa, Japan.

“The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index is simple to calculate – so easy – and I think it’s a better predictor than BMI,” she said.

Fifty-six percent of the PAD patients had a GNRI score greater than 98, indicative of no increased risk of malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies. Their 5-year overall survival rate was 81%, compared with 62% in patients with a score of 92-98, 40% in those with a score of 82-91, and 23% with a score of less than 82. Other independent predictors of overall survival in multivariate analysis were age, estimated glomerular filtration rate, ankle brachial index, and C-reactive protein level.

A GNRI score above 98 was also predictive of significantly lower 5-year risk of both major adverse cardiovascular events and the composite of major adverse cardiovascular and limb events than in patients with a score of 98 or less.

The key remaining unanswered question is whether providing timely nutritional support to PAD patients with a low GNRI score will result in improved overall and limb survival and other outcomes.

Dr. Matsuo reported having no financial conflicts.

SOURCE: Matsuo Y. ESC CONGRESS 2019. Abstract P1956.

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Isolated iliac disease a marker for better health status?

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Mon, 10/07/2019 - 14:33

 

– Surgery and endovascular treatment for peripheral artery disease (PAD) among patients with claudication improves health status more in the setting of isolated iliac disease and multilevel disease than in other forms of PAD, which suggests that vascular specialists should give pause before pursuing interventions on superficial femoral and infrapopliteal artery lesions, a researcher of the PORTRAIT registry reported at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Vascular Surgery Society.

Vogel_Todd_R_MISSOURI2_web.jpg
Dr. Todd R. Vogel

“Our analysis demonstrated that interventions for aortoiliac disease and multilevel disease appeared to improve overall health status more over time compared to femoral-popliteal disease and infrapopliteal disease,” said Todd R. Vogel, MD, of the University of Missouri Health System in Columbia.

The study evaluated improvement in Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ) scores from baseline to post intervention in 623 patients in the PORTRAIT (Patient-Centered Outcomes Related to Treatment Practices in Peripheral Arterial Disease: Investigating Trajectories) registry. The patients were selected and combined with anatomic data on the nature of their claudication. Aortoiliac-only (AI) disease represented 20.4% (n = 127) of the study group, femoral-popliteal-only (FP) 35.5% (n = 221), infrapopliteal/distal (IP) 6.3% (n = 39), and multilevel disease (ML) 37.9% (n = 236).

In terms of demographics, patients in the AI group tended to be younger (average age of 61.2 years vs. 66.6 years for the study overall; P less than .001) and had a higher rate of smokers (96.1% former and current smokers vs. 90.7% overall; P less than .001). Otherwise, Dr. Vogel noted, demographics, smoking status, and severity of claudication were similar across the disease groups.

Rates of medical intervention were similar in the AI and ML disease groups, which were primarily endovascular procedures: 26% and 27%, respectively. The AI group had the highest rates of endovascular interventions, at 24%, with the FP group at 15%, IP at 11% and ML at 21%. Those who did not have surgery or endovascular aneurysm repair were treated medically.

“The AI group did significantly better at 3 months than the other groups,” Dr. Vogel pointed out, noting that at 12 months those patients had an average PAQ score of around 78 versus scores of around 75 for FP, 74 for IP, and 70 for ML.

“In the AI group, there’s also an immediate increase in quality of life that is sustained over time,” he said. At 3 months, PAQ scores in AI patients who had endovascular aneurysm repair increased 41 points over baseline, leveling off to a 38.8-point gain at 12 months, the highest gains across all disease groups and all treatment categories.

“However,” Dr. Vogel added, “the group with ML disease probably was the most improved over time on the PAQ scores,” he said, explaining that across the board, this group had lower baseline PAQ scores than all the other groups.

“No significant benefits were found with intervention versus medical management for FP and IP,” he said. “This suggests that intervention should be considered after medical management has been exhausted.”

Dr. Vogel also said the findings support aggressive treatment of AI and ML for symptomatic claudication. “This anatomic region represents the greatest potential benefit for improving overall health status in patients with symptomatic PAD,” he said.

Dr. Vogel had no relevant financial relationships to disclose.

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– Surgery and endovascular treatment for peripheral artery disease (PAD) among patients with claudication improves health status more in the setting of isolated iliac disease and multilevel disease than in other forms of PAD, which suggests that vascular specialists should give pause before pursuing interventions on superficial femoral and infrapopliteal artery lesions, a researcher of the PORTRAIT registry reported at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Vascular Surgery Society.

Vogel_Todd_R_MISSOURI2_web.jpg
Dr. Todd R. Vogel

“Our analysis demonstrated that interventions for aortoiliac disease and multilevel disease appeared to improve overall health status more over time compared to femoral-popliteal disease and infrapopliteal disease,” said Todd R. Vogel, MD, of the University of Missouri Health System in Columbia.

The study evaluated improvement in Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ) scores from baseline to post intervention in 623 patients in the PORTRAIT (Patient-Centered Outcomes Related to Treatment Practices in Peripheral Arterial Disease: Investigating Trajectories) registry. The patients were selected and combined with anatomic data on the nature of their claudication. Aortoiliac-only (AI) disease represented 20.4% (n = 127) of the study group, femoral-popliteal-only (FP) 35.5% (n = 221), infrapopliteal/distal (IP) 6.3% (n = 39), and multilevel disease (ML) 37.9% (n = 236).

In terms of demographics, patients in the AI group tended to be younger (average age of 61.2 years vs. 66.6 years for the study overall; P less than .001) and had a higher rate of smokers (96.1% former and current smokers vs. 90.7% overall; P less than .001). Otherwise, Dr. Vogel noted, demographics, smoking status, and severity of claudication were similar across the disease groups.

Rates of medical intervention were similar in the AI and ML disease groups, which were primarily endovascular procedures: 26% and 27%, respectively. The AI group had the highest rates of endovascular interventions, at 24%, with the FP group at 15%, IP at 11% and ML at 21%. Those who did not have surgery or endovascular aneurysm repair were treated medically.

“The AI group did significantly better at 3 months than the other groups,” Dr. Vogel pointed out, noting that at 12 months those patients had an average PAQ score of around 78 versus scores of around 75 for FP, 74 for IP, and 70 for ML.

“In the AI group, there’s also an immediate increase in quality of life that is sustained over time,” he said. At 3 months, PAQ scores in AI patients who had endovascular aneurysm repair increased 41 points over baseline, leveling off to a 38.8-point gain at 12 months, the highest gains across all disease groups and all treatment categories.

“However,” Dr. Vogel added, “the group with ML disease probably was the most improved over time on the PAQ scores,” he said, explaining that across the board, this group had lower baseline PAQ scores than all the other groups.

“No significant benefits were found with intervention versus medical management for FP and IP,” he said. “This suggests that intervention should be considered after medical management has been exhausted.”

Dr. Vogel also said the findings support aggressive treatment of AI and ML for symptomatic claudication. “This anatomic region represents the greatest potential benefit for improving overall health status in patients with symptomatic PAD,” he said.

Dr. Vogel had no relevant financial relationships to disclose.

 

– Surgery and endovascular treatment for peripheral artery disease (PAD) among patients with claudication improves health status more in the setting of isolated iliac disease and multilevel disease than in other forms of PAD, which suggests that vascular specialists should give pause before pursuing interventions on superficial femoral and infrapopliteal artery lesions, a researcher of the PORTRAIT registry reported at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Vascular Surgery Society.

Vogel_Todd_R_MISSOURI2_web.jpg
Dr. Todd R. Vogel

“Our analysis demonstrated that interventions for aortoiliac disease and multilevel disease appeared to improve overall health status more over time compared to femoral-popliteal disease and infrapopliteal disease,” said Todd R. Vogel, MD, of the University of Missouri Health System in Columbia.

The study evaluated improvement in Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ) scores from baseline to post intervention in 623 patients in the PORTRAIT (Patient-Centered Outcomes Related to Treatment Practices in Peripheral Arterial Disease: Investigating Trajectories) registry. The patients were selected and combined with anatomic data on the nature of their claudication. Aortoiliac-only (AI) disease represented 20.4% (n = 127) of the study group, femoral-popliteal-only (FP) 35.5% (n = 221), infrapopliteal/distal (IP) 6.3% (n = 39), and multilevel disease (ML) 37.9% (n = 236).

In terms of demographics, patients in the AI group tended to be younger (average age of 61.2 years vs. 66.6 years for the study overall; P less than .001) and had a higher rate of smokers (96.1% former and current smokers vs. 90.7% overall; P less than .001). Otherwise, Dr. Vogel noted, demographics, smoking status, and severity of claudication were similar across the disease groups.

Rates of medical intervention were similar in the AI and ML disease groups, which were primarily endovascular procedures: 26% and 27%, respectively. The AI group had the highest rates of endovascular interventions, at 24%, with the FP group at 15%, IP at 11% and ML at 21%. Those who did not have surgery or endovascular aneurysm repair were treated medically.

“The AI group did significantly better at 3 months than the other groups,” Dr. Vogel pointed out, noting that at 12 months those patients had an average PAQ score of around 78 versus scores of around 75 for FP, 74 for IP, and 70 for ML.

“In the AI group, there’s also an immediate increase in quality of life that is sustained over time,” he said. At 3 months, PAQ scores in AI patients who had endovascular aneurysm repair increased 41 points over baseline, leveling off to a 38.8-point gain at 12 months, the highest gains across all disease groups and all treatment categories.

“However,” Dr. Vogel added, “the group with ML disease probably was the most improved over time on the PAQ scores,” he said, explaining that across the board, this group had lower baseline PAQ scores than all the other groups.

“No significant benefits were found with intervention versus medical management for FP and IP,” he said. “This suggests that intervention should be considered after medical management has been exhausted.”

Dr. Vogel also said the findings support aggressive treatment of AI and ML for symptomatic claudication. “This anatomic region represents the greatest potential benefit for improving overall health status in patients with symptomatic PAD,” he said.

Dr. Vogel had no relevant financial relationships to disclose.

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FDA grants sirolimus-eluting balloon breakthrough device designation for PAD

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Tue, 09/17/2019 - 17:55

 

The Food and Drug Administration has granted the Breakthrough Device Designation to the Virtue sirolimus-eluting balloon (SEB) for below-the-knee peripheral arterial disease, according to a statement from Orchestra BioMed.

FDA_icon3_web.jpg

According to the FDA, this designation indicates that the Virtue SEB could provide a “more effective treatment option ... for a life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating disease”; as the release notes, below-the-knee atherosclerosis presents a high rate of amputation and poor survival outcomes but has limited treatment options. The designation leads to expedited development, assessment, and review.

Darren R. Sherman, president, CEO, and cofounder of Orchestra BioMed, noted that the Virtue SEB “has the potential to improve long-term outcomes and reduce periprocedural complications” that can “extend hospital stay and increase cost of treatment.” The system had previously received this designation for coronary in-stent restenosis based upon the 3-year results of the European SABRE trial.

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The Food and Drug Administration has granted the Breakthrough Device Designation to the Virtue sirolimus-eluting balloon (SEB) for below-the-knee peripheral arterial disease, according to a statement from Orchestra BioMed.

FDA_icon3_web.jpg

According to the FDA, this designation indicates that the Virtue SEB could provide a “more effective treatment option ... for a life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating disease”; as the release notes, below-the-knee atherosclerosis presents a high rate of amputation and poor survival outcomes but has limited treatment options. The designation leads to expedited development, assessment, and review.

Darren R. Sherman, president, CEO, and cofounder of Orchestra BioMed, noted that the Virtue SEB “has the potential to improve long-term outcomes and reduce periprocedural complications” that can “extend hospital stay and increase cost of treatment.” The system had previously received this designation for coronary in-stent restenosis based upon the 3-year results of the European SABRE trial.

 

The Food and Drug Administration has granted the Breakthrough Device Designation to the Virtue sirolimus-eluting balloon (SEB) for below-the-knee peripheral arterial disease, according to a statement from Orchestra BioMed.

FDA_icon3_web.jpg

According to the FDA, this designation indicates that the Virtue SEB could provide a “more effective treatment option ... for a life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating disease”; as the release notes, below-the-knee atherosclerosis presents a high rate of amputation and poor survival outcomes but has limited treatment options. The designation leads to expedited development, assessment, and review.

Darren R. Sherman, president, CEO, and cofounder of Orchestra BioMed, noted that the Virtue SEB “has the potential to improve long-term outcomes and reduce periprocedural complications” that can “extend hospital stay and increase cost of treatment.” The system had previously received this designation for coronary in-stent restenosis based upon the 3-year results of the European SABRE trial.

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In PAD, dropping statins ups death risk 43%

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Thu, 06/29/2023 - 16:24

For patients with peripheral artery disease, statin therapy is a literal lifeline, nearly halving mortality risk, according to new research presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Patients with peripheral manifestations of cardiovascular disease “are a population with an extremely high risk to suffer a heart attack or a stroke,” said Joern Dopheide, MD, during a press conference at the meeting. Despite the known benefits of statins, including the reduction of all-cause and cardiovascular death and the reduction of morbidity, adherence to guideline-directed statin therapy is far from optimal, said Dr. Dopheide of Bern (Switzerland) University Hospital.

Patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) not taking statins had a mortality rate of 34%, more than three times that of patients adherent to an intensified statin regimen. More surprisingly, patients who had been on a statin and then stopped the medication also had a mortality rate of 33%, indistinguishable from those who had never been treated with a statin.

Although statin adherence is low in general, it’s especially low in patients with PAD, said Dr. Dopheide. Still, he said, “few systematic data exist on the prognostic value of statin adherence and the correlation between adherence and cardiovascular outcome in PAD patients.”
[embed:render:related:node:177379]

Accordingly, Dr. Dopheide and his coinvestigators sought to determine the association between statin adherence and survival in PAD patients. The researchers obtained baseline and follow-up data for a cohort of 691 symptomatic PAD patients seen at a single site, looking at statin dosage, LDL cholesterol levels, and survival.

The patients were followed for a period of 50 months. Dr. Dopheide said that “Over the time course, we were able to increase the statin adherence from about 73% to about 81%, and parallel to that, we were able to reduce the LDL cholesterol levels from about 97 to 83 mg/dL, and we were able to increase the intensity of patients on statin therapy.”

Dr. Dopheide said that he and his colleagues saw a dose-response effect, so that the biggest drop in cholesterol was seen in patients on high statin doses, on more potent statins, or both.

Intensity was increased in some cases by upping statin dose – the mean statin dose climbed from 50 to 58 mg daily during the study period. An alternative strategy was to switch to a more potent statin such as atorvastatin or rosuvastatin; sometimes both intensity and dose were boosted.

“We were able to see that patients who were always on their statin therapy had a pretty low mortality rate of about 20%,” a figure that was halved for patients on more intensive statin therapy, who had a mortality rate of 10% across the study period, said Dr. Dopheide. “Patients in whom we started a statin therapy still profited from it, and had only a 15% mortality,” he added.

Some of the most surprising – and disturbing – study findings involved those who reduced their statin dose: “When patients discontinued their usual dose and decreased it, they suffered an even higher mortality rate, of nearly 43%. So that was kind of surprising and shocking to us.”

Identifying these high-risk patients and keeping them adherent is a substantial clinical challenge, but an important goal, said Dr. Dopheide. “We know that patients with peripheral arterial disease are a little more underrepresented in daily practice; it’s hard to identify them, especially when they are asymptomatic,” he acknowledged. However, once a PAD patient is identified, “One should at least keep the patient on the statin dosage they have,” or initiate statins if needed.

Further, warned Dr. Dopheide, “One should never discontinue statin or decrease the dosage,” adding that PAD patients should be informed that they are at “very high risk for myocardial infarction or stroke.” These patients “should regard their statin therapy as one of the most important and life-saving medications they can take,” he said.

Dr. Dopheide reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

koakes@mdedge.com

SOURCE: Dopheide, J., et al. ESC Congress 2019, Abstract P5363.

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For patients with peripheral artery disease, statin therapy is a literal lifeline, nearly halving mortality risk, according to new research presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Patients with peripheral manifestations of cardiovascular disease “are a population with an extremely high risk to suffer a heart attack or a stroke,” said Joern Dopheide, MD, during a press conference at the meeting. Despite the known benefits of statins, including the reduction of all-cause and cardiovascular death and the reduction of morbidity, adherence to guideline-directed statin therapy is far from optimal, said Dr. Dopheide of Bern (Switzerland) University Hospital.

Patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) not taking statins had a mortality rate of 34%, more than three times that of patients adherent to an intensified statin regimen. More surprisingly, patients who had been on a statin and then stopped the medication also had a mortality rate of 33%, indistinguishable from those who had never been treated with a statin.

Although statin adherence is low in general, it’s especially low in patients with PAD, said Dr. Dopheide. Still, he said, “few systematic data exist on the prognostic value of statin adherence and the correlation between adherence and cardiovascular outcome in PAD patients.”
[embed:render:related:node:177379]

Accordingly, Dr. Dopheide and his coinvestigators sought to determine the association between statin adherence and survival in PAD patients. The researchers obtained baseline and follow-up data for a cohort of 691 symptomatic PAD patients seen at a single site, looking at statin dosage, LDL cholesterol levels, and survival.

The patients were followed for a period of 50 months. Dr. Dopheide said that “Over the time course, we were able to increase the statin adherence from about 73% to about 81%, and parallel to that, we were able to reduce the LDL cholesterol levels from about 97 to 83 mg/dL, and we were able to increase the intensity of patients on statin therapy.”

Dr. Dopheide said that he and his colleagues saw a dose-response effect, so that the biggest drop in cholesterol was seen in patients on high statin doses, on more potent statins, or both.

Intensity was increased in some cases by upping statin dose – the mean statin dose climbed from 50 to 58 mg daily during the study period. An alternative strategy was to switch to a more potent statin such as atorvastatin or rosuvastatin; sometimes both intensity and dose were boosted.

“We were able to see that patients who were always on their statin therapy had a pretty low mortality rate of about 20%,” a figure that was halved for patients on more intensive statin therapy, who had a mortality rate of 10% across the study period, said Dr. Dopheide. “Patients in whom we started a statin therapy still profited from it, and had only a 15% mortality,” he added.

Some of the most surprising – and disturbing – study findings involved those who reduced their statin dose: “When patients discontinued their usual dose and decreased it, they suffered an even higher mortality rate, of nearly 43%. So that was kind of surprising and shocking to us.”

Identifying these high-risk patients and keeping them adherent is a substantial clinical challenge, but an important goal, said Dr. Dopheide. “We know that patients with peripheral arterial disease are a little more underrepresented in daily practice; it’s hard to identify them, especially when they are asymptomatic,” he acknowledged. However, once a PAD patient is identified, “One should at least keep the patient on the statin dosage they have,” or initiate statins if needed.

Further, warned Dr. Dopheide, “One should never discontinue statin or decrease the dosage,” adding that PAD patients should be informed that they are at “very high risk for myocardial infarction or stroke.” These patients “should regard their statin therapy as one of the most important and life-saving medications they can take,” he said.

Dr. Dopheide reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

koakes@mdedge.com

SOURCE: Dopheide, J., et al. ESC Congress 2019, Abstract P5363.

For patients with peripheral artery disease, statin therapy is a literal lifeline, nearly halving mortality risk, according to new research presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Patients with peripheral manifestations of cardiovascular disease “are a population with an extremely high risk to suffer a heart attack or a stroke,” said Joern Dopheide, MD, during a press conference at the meeting. Despite the known benefits of statins, including the reduction of all-cause and cardiovascular death and the reduction of morbidity, adherence to guideline-directed statin therapy is far from optimal, said Dr. Dopheide of Bern (Switzerland) University Hospital.

Patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) not taking statins had a mortality rate of 34%, more than three times that of patients adherent to an intensified statin regimen. More surprisingly, patients who had been on a statin and then stopped the medication also had a mortality rate of 33%, indistinguishable from those who had never been treated with a statin.

Although statin adherence is low in general, it’s especially low in patients with PAD, said Dr. Dopheide. Still, he said, “few systematic data exist on the prognostic value of statin adherence and the correlation between adherence and cardiovascular outcome in PAD patients.”
[embed:render:related:node:177379]

Accordingly, Dr. Dopheide and his coinvestigators sought to determine the association between statin adherence and survival in PAD patients. The researchers obtained baseline and follow-up data for a cohort of 691 symptomatic PAD patients seen at a single site, looking at statin dosage, LDL cholesterol levels, and survival.

The patients were followed for a period of 50 months. Dr. Dopheide said that “Over the time course, we were able to increase the statin adherence from about 73% to about 81%, and parallel to that, we were able to reduce the LDL cholesterol levels from about 97 to 83 mg/dL, and we were able to increase the intensity of patients on statin therapy.”

Dr. Dopheide said that he and his colleagues saw a dose-response effect, so that the biggest drop in cholesterol was seen in patients on high statin doses, on more potent statins, or both.

Intensity was increased in some cases by upping statin dose – the mean statin dose climbed from 50 to 58 mg daily during the study period. An alternative strategy was to switch to a more potent statin such as atorvastatin or rosuvastatin; sometimes both intensity and dose were boosted.

“We were able to see that patients who were always on their statin therapy had a pretty low mortality rate of about 20%,” a figure that was halved for patients on more intensive statin therapy, who had a mortality rate of 10% across the study period, said Dr. Dopheide. “Patients in whom we started a statin therapy still profited from it, and had only a 15% mortality,” he added.

Some of the most surprising – and disturbing – study findings involved those who reduced their statin dose: “When patients discontinued their usual dose and decreased it, they suffered an even higher mortality rate, of nearly 43%. So that was kind of surprising and shocking to us.”

Identifying these high-risk patients and keeping them adherent is a substantial clinical challenge, but an important goal, said Dr. Dopheide. “We know that patients with peripheral arterial disease are a little more underrepresented in daily practice; it’s hard to identify them, especially when they are asymptomatic,” he acknowledged. However, once a PAD patient is identified, “One should at least keep the patient on the statin dosage they have,” or initiate statins if needed.

Further, warned Dr. Dopheide, “One should never discontinue statin or decrease the dosage,” adding that PAD patients should be informed that they are at “very high risk for myocardial infarction or stroke.” These patients “should regard their statin therapy as one of the most important and life-saving medications they can take,” he said.

Dr. Dopheide reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

koakes@mdedge.com

SOURCE: Dopheide, J., et al. ESC Congress 2019, Abstract P5363.

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PCSK9 inhibition cuts events in very-high-risk groups

PCSK9 benefit clear in high-risk patients
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Tue, 08/27/2019 - 09:37

 

Patients at very high risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes derive substantial benefit from proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibition, according to results of two analyses from the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial.

In one prespecified analysis, the PCSK9 inhibitor alirocumab was linked to improved cardiovascular outcomes in patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), while in the other, researchers wrote that alirocumab showed a “large absolute benefit” in patients with polyvascular disease, which they defined as the presence of concomitant peripheral artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, or both.

These reports on alirocumab outcomes in patients with prior CABG and polyvascular disease appear in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Prior CABG and polyvascular disease were both associated with markedly elevated risks of major adverse coronary events (MACE) and death, investigators wrote in the reports.

The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial included 18,924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and high atherogenic lipoproteins despite intensive statin treatment. The primary outcome was MACE, comprising a composite of coronary heart disease death, nonfatal MI, ischemic stroke, or unstable angina requiring hospitalization. During a median 2.8 years of follow-up, this outcome occurred in 9.5% of the overall population randomized to alirocumab and 11.1% of those on placebo, for a statistically significant and clinically meaningful 15% relative risk reduction.

Polyvascular disease

In the trial population, 1,405 patients had polyvascular disease in at least two beds, including a coronary artery, plus either peripheral artery or cerebrovascular, while 149 had polyvascular disease in all three beds. The remainder, including 17,370 patients, were classified as having monovascular disease.

The incidences of MACE for placebo-treated patients with monovascular disease, two-bed polyvascular disease, and three-bed polyvascular disease were 10.0%, 22.2%, and 39.7%, respectively. Alirocumab treatment resulted in an absolute risk reduction for MACE of 1.4%, 1.9%, and 13.0%, for those respective groups (P = .0006).

Similarly, the incidence of the secondary endpoint of death for placebo-treated patients was 3.5%, 10.0%, and 21.8%, and the ARR with alirocumab was 0.4%, 1.3%, and 16.2% (P = .002), according to their reported data.

[embed:render:related:node:160512]

These results suggest that patients with polyvascular disease are an “easily identifiable subgroup” of ACS patients with a high absolute risk of MACE and death, according to the investigators, led by J. Wouter Jukema, MD, PhD, of Leiden (the Netherlands) University Medical Center.

“The large absolute benefit of PCSK9 inhibition with alirocumab, when added to high-intensity statin therapy, is a potential benefit for this group of patients,” Dr. Jukema and coauthors wrote.

Prior CABG

Of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES patients, 1,025 had an index CABG after ACS, 1,003 had CABG before ACS, and the remaining 16,896 had no such procedure.

Hazard ratios for both MACE and death in all CABG categories were consistent with the overall results of ODYSSEY OUTCOMES, the investigators wrote. Specifically, alirocumab reduced MACE and death in the overall study, with HRs of 0.85 for both endpoints.

The ARRs in MACE with alirocumab were 1.3% for no CABG, 0.9% for index CABG, and 6.4% for prior CABG (P = .0007), while ARRs in death with the treatment were 0.4%, 0.5%, and 3.6% (P = .03) for those categories, respectively. In this analysis, the investigators calculated the number needed to treat to prevent one primary or secondary endpoint over the median 2.8 years of follow-up. The numbers needed to treat were 16 for prior CABG, 111 for index, and 77 for no prior CABG.

“Although the relative benefit of alirocumab versus placebo is consistent regardless of prior CABG status, those with prior CABG achieve substantially greater absolute risk reduction and consequently lower number needed to treat,” wrote the authors of the analysis, led by Shaun G. Goodman, MD, MSc, of St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto.

Funding for the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial and its subanalyses was provided by Sanofi and Regeneron. Authors of the analyses reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Regeneron, Amgen, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, and others.

SOURCES: Goodman SG et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.015; Jukema JW et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.03.013.

Body

 

These two secondary analyses of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial are very important studies that reinforce the usefulness of PCSK9 inhibition in extremely high risk populations.

Although each study has limitations as acknowledged, it provides further evidence that should lead us to strongly consider the use of PCSK9 inhibitors in patients with a previous coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or a history of polyvascular disease.

The studies confirm that aggressive lipid-lowering therapy will benefit patients in those high-risk subsets. The significant reductions in mortality associated with lowering LDL cholesterol using alirocumab can no longer be ignored.

Economic analyses would be interesting, as the substantial reductions in major adverse cardiovascular events and all-cause deaths attributed to alirocumab would likely impact health care costs and society at large.

However, it is concerning that patients with prior CABG and those with a high atherosclerosis burden in multiple arterial territories were seemingly less well treated than acute coronary syndrome patients.

An LDL cholesterol level of at least 100 mg/dL was seen in upward of 40% of the high-risk participants at randomization, while 87% had high BP, 40% had diabetes, and 16% were current smokers.

A reasonable first step in the approach to patient care is for physicians to be less complacent and apply, with enthusiasm, secondary prevention guidelines in post-CABG and polyvascular disease patients to strive to eliminate smoking and to enforce lifestyle modifications with known benefits in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

Jacques Genest, MD, and Alexandre M. Bélanger, MD, of McGill University, Montreal, and Mandeep S. Sidhu, MD, of Albany (N.Y.) Medical College made these comments in an accompanying editorial ( J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.016 ). The authors reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Amgen, Pfizer, Aegerion Pharmaceuticals, Valeant Pharmaceuticals, and others.

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These two secondary analyses of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial are very important studies that reinforce the usefulness of PCSK9 inhibition in extremely high risk populations.

Although each study has limitations as acknowledged, it provides further evidence that should lead us to strongly consider the use of PCSK9 inhibitors in patients with a previous coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or a history of polyvascular disease.

The studies confirm that aggressive lipid-lowering therapy will benefit patients in those high-risk subsets. The significant reductions in mortality associated with lowering LDL cholesterol using alirocumab can no longer be ignored.

Economic analyses would be interesting, as the substantial reductions in major adverse cardiovascular events and all-cause deaths attributed to alirocumab would likely impact health care costs and society at large.

However, it is concerning that patients with prior CABG and those with a high atherosclerosis burden in multiple arterial territories were seemingly less well treated than acute coronary syndrome patients.

An LDL cholesterol level of at least 100 mg/dL was seen in upward of 40% of the high-risk participants at randomization, while 87% had high BP, 40% had diabetes, and 16% were current smokers.

A reasonable first step in the approach to patient care is for physicians to be less complacent and apply, with enthusiasm, secondary prevention guidelines in post-CABG and polyvascular disease patients to strive to eliminate smoking and to enforce lifestyle modifications with known benefits in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

Jacques Genest, MD, and Alexandre M. Bélanger, MD, of McGill University, Montreal, and Mandeep S. Sidhu, MD, of Albany (N.Y.) Medical College made these comments in an accompanying editorial ( J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.016 ). The authors reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Amgen, Pfizer, Aegerion Pharmaceuticals, Valeant Pharmaceuticals, and others.

Body

 

These two secondary analyses of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial are very important studies that reinforce the usefulness of PCSK9 inhibition in extremely high risk populations.

Although each study has limitations as acknowledged, it provides further evidence that should lead us to strongly consider the use of PCSK9 inhibitors in patients with a previous coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or a history of polyvascular disease.

The studies confirm that aggressive lipid-lowering therapy will benefit patients in those high-risk subsets. The significant reductions in mortality associated with lowering LDL cholesterol using alirocumab can no longer be ignored.

Economic analyses would be interesting, as the substantial reductions in major adverse cardiovascular events and all-cause deaths attributed to alirocumab would likely impact health care costs and society at large.

However, it is concerning that patients with prior CABG and those with a high atherosclerosis burden in multiple arterial territories were seemingly less well treated than acute coronary syndrome patients.

An LDL cholesterol level of at least 100 mg/dL was seen in upward of 40% of the high-risk participants at randomization, while 87% had high BP, 40% had diabetes, and 16% were current smokers.

A reasonable first step in the approach to patient care is for physicians to be less complacent and apply, with enthusiasm, secondary prevention guidelines in post-CABG and polyvascular disease patients to strive to eliminate smoking and to enforce lifestyle modifications with known benefits in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

Jacques Genest, MD, and Alexandre M. Bélanger, MD, of McGill University, Montreal, and Mandeep S. Sidhu, MD, of Albany (N.Y.) Medical College made these comments in an accompanying editorial ( J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.016 ). The authors reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Amgen, Pfizer, Aegerion Pharmaceuticals, Valeant Pharmaceuticals, and others.

Title
PCSK9 benefit clear in high-risk patients
PCSK9 benefit clear in high-risk patients

 

Patients at very high risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes derive substantial benefit from proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibition, according to results of two analyses from the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial.

In one prespecified analysis, the PCSK9 inhibitor alirocumab was linked to improved cardiovascular outcomes in patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), while in the other, researchers wrote that alirocumab showed a “large absolute benefit” in patients with polyvascular disease, which they defined as the presence of concomitant peripheral artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, or both.

These reports on alirocumab outcomes in patients with prior CABG and polyvascular disease appear in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Prior CABG and polyvascular disease were both associated with markedly elevated risks of major adverse coronary events (MACE) and death, investigators wrote in the reports.

The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial included 18,924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and high atherogenic lipoproteins despite intensive statin treatment. The primary outcome was MACE, comprising a composite of coronary heart disease death, nonfatal MI, ischemic stroke, or unstable angina requiring hospitalization. During a median 2.8 years of follow-up, this outcome occurred in 9.5% of the overall population randomized to alirocumab and 11.1% of those on placebo, for a statistically significant and clinically meaningful 15% relative risk reduction.

Polyvascular disease

In the trial population, 1,405 patients had polyvascular disease in at least two beds, including a coronary artery, plus either peripheral artery or cerebrovascular, while 149 had polyvascular disease in all three beds. The remainder, including 17,370 patients, were classified as having monovascular disease.

The incidences of MACE for placebo-treated patients with monovascular disease, two-bed polyvascular disease, and three-bed polyvascular disease were 10.0%, 22.2%, and 39.7%, respectively. Alirocumab treatment resulted in an absolute risk reduction for MACE of 1.4%, 1.9%, and 13.0%, for those respective groups (P = .0006).

Similarly, the incidence of the secondary endpoint of death for placebo-treated patients was 3.5%, 10.0%, and 21.8%, and the ARR with alirocumab was 0.4%, 1.3%, and 16.2% (P = .002), according to their reported data.

[embed:render:related:node:160512]

These results suggest that patients with polyvascular disease are an “easily identifiable subgroup” of ACS patients with a high absolute risk of MACE and death, according to the investigators, led by J. Wouter Jukema, MD, PhD, of Leiden (the Netherlands) University Medical Center.

“The large absolute benefit of PCSK9 inhibition with alirocumab, when added to high-intensity statin therapy, is a potential benefit for this group of patients,” Dr. Jukema and coauthors wrote.

Prior CABG

Of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES patients, 1,025 had an index CABG after ACS, 1,003 had CABG before ACS, and the remaining 16,896 had no such procedure.

Hazard ratios for both MACE and death in all CABG categories were consistent with the overall results of ODYSSEY OUTCOMES, the investigators wrote. Specifically, alirocumab reduced MACE and death in the overall study, with HRs of 0.85 for both endpoints.

The ARRs in MACE with alirocumab were 1.3% for no CABG, 0.9% for index CABG, and 6.4% for prior CABG (P = .0007), while ARRs in death with the treatment were 0.4%, 0.5%, and 3.6% (P = .03) for those categories, respectively. In this analysis, the investigators calculated the number needed to treat to prevent one primary or secondary endpoint over the median 2.8 years of follow-up. The numbers needed to treat were 16 for prior CABG, 111 for index, and 77 for no prior CABG.

“Although the relative benefit of alirocumab versus placebo is consistent regardless of prior CABG status, those with prior CABG achieve substantially greater absolute risk reduction and consequently lower number needed to treat,” wrote the authors of the analysis, led by Shaun G. Goodman, MD, MSc, of St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto.

Funding for the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial and its subanalyses was provided by Sanofi and Regeneron. Authors of the analyses reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Regeneron, Amgen, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, and others.

SOURCES: Goodman SG et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.015; Jukema JW et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.03.013.

 

Patients at very high risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes derive substantial benefit from proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibition, according to results of two analyses from the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial.

In one prespecified analysis, the PCSK9 inhibitor alirocumab was linked to improved cardiovascular outcomes in patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), while in the other, researchers wrote that alirocumab showed a “large absolute benefit” in patients with polyvascular disease, which they defined as the presence of concomitant peripheral artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, or both.

These reports on alirocumab outcomes in patients with prior CABG and polyvascular disease appear in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Prior CABG and polyvascular disease were both associated with markedly elevated risks of major adverse coronary events (MACE) and death, investigators wrote in the reports.

The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial included 18,924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and high atherogenic lipoproteins despite intensive statin treatment. The primary outcome was MACE, comprising a composite of coronary heart disease death, nonfatal MI, ischemic stroke, or unstable angina requiring hospitalization. During a median 2.8 years of follow-up, this outcome occurred in 9.5% of the overall population randomized to alirocumab and 11.1% of those on placebo, for a statistically significant and clinically meaningful 15% relative risk reduction.

Polyvascular disease

In the trial population, 1,405 patients had polyvascular disease in at least two beds, including a coronary artery, plus either peripheral artery or cerebrovascular, while 149 had polyvascular disease in all three beds. The remainder, including 17,370 patients, were classified as having monovascular disease.

The incidences of MACE for placebo-treated patients with monovascular disease, two-bed polyvascular disease, and three-bed polyvascular disease were 10.0%, 22.2%, and 39.7%, respectively. Alirocumab treatment resulted in an absolute risk reduction for MACE of 1.4%, 1.9%, and 13.0%, for those respective groups (P = .0006).

Similarly, the incidence of the secondary endpoint of death for placebo-treated patients was 3.5%, 10.0%, and 21.8%, and the ARR with alirocumab was 0.4%, 1.3%, and 16.2% (P = .002), according to their reported data.

[embed:render:related:node:160512]

These results suggest that patients with polyvascular disease are an “easily identifiable subgroup” of ACS patients with a high absolute risk of MACE and death, according to the investigators, led by J. Wouter Jukema, MD, PhD, of Leiden (the Netherlands) University Medical Center.

“The large absolute benefit of PCSK9 inhibition with alirocumab, when added to high-intensity statin therapy, is a potential benefit for this group of patients,” Dr. Jukema and coauthors wrote.

Prior CABG

Of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES patients, 1,025 had an index CABG after ACS, 1,003 had CABG before ACS, and the remaining 16,896 had no such procedure.

Hazard ratios for both MACE and death in all CABG categories were consistent with the overall results of ODYSSEY OUTCOMES, the investigators wrote. Specifically, alirocumab reduced MACE and death in the overall study, with HRs of 0.85 for both endpoints.

The ARRs in MACE with alirocumab were 1.3% for no CABG, 0.9% for index CABG, and 6.4% for prior CABG (P = .0007), while ARRs in death with the treatment were 0.4%, 0.5%, and 3.6% (P = .03) for those categories, respectively. In this analysis, the investigators calculated the number needed to treat to prevent one primary or secondary endpoint over the median 2.8 years of follow-up. The numbers needed to treat were 16 for prior CABG, 111 for index, and 77 for no prior CABG.

“Although the relative benefit of alirocumab versus placebo is consistent regardless of prior CABG status, those with prior CABG achieve substantially greater absolute risk reduction and consequently lower number needed to treat,” wrote the authors of the analysis, led by Shaun G. Goodman, MD, MSc, of St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto.

Funding for the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial and its subanalyses was provided by Sanofi and Regeneron. Authors of the analyses reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Regeneron, Amgen, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, and others.

SOURCES: Goodman SG et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.015; Jukema JW et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.03.013.

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Key clinical point: The PCSK9 inhibitor alirocumab improved cardiovascular outcomes in very-high-risk populations, including patients with previous coronary artery bypass grafting and those with polyvascular disease.

Major findings: In one analysis, the absolute risk reductions in major adverse coronary events with alirocumab were 1.3% for no coronary artery bypass grafting, 0.9% for index CABG, and 6.4% for prior CABG. In another analysis, alirocumab treatment resulted in an ARR for major adverse coronary events of 1.4%, 1.9%, and 13.0% for patients with monovascular disease, two-bed polyvascular disease, and three-bed polyvascular disease, respectively.

Study details: Prespecified analyses of patients with recent acute coronary syndrome and high atherogenic lipoproteins despite intensive statin treatment in the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial, which included 18,924 total participants.

Disclosures: Funding for the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial and its subanalyses was provided by Sanofi and Regeneron. Authors of the analyses reported disclosures related to Sanofi, Regeneron, Amgen, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, and others.

Sources: Goodman SG et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.07.015; Jukema JW et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019 Aug 26. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2019.03.013.

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AHA highlights limitations of perfusion testing for critical limb ischemia

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Mon, 08/12/2019 - 05:00

 

A new assessment statement from the American Heart Association reviewed the strengths and limitations of current imaging techniques for critical limb ischemia (CLI), the severest form of peripheral arterial disease (PAD).

The main techniques discussed were the ankle-brachial index (ABI), toe-brachial index (TBI), toe systolic pressure, transcutaneous oximetry (TcPO2) and skin perfusion pressure (SPP). The literature review also identified what the authors saw as opportunities for technology improvement.

“No single vascular test has been identified as the most important predictor of wound healing or major amputation for the threatened limb,” wrote Sanjay Misra, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and colleagues, on behalf of the American Heart Association Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease, the Council on Clinical Cardiology, and the Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing.

Of particular concern were limitations seen in the use of ABI, the most widely used assessment method. “Although ABI was first described to diagnose PAD, it has not been shown to be an accurate predictor of wound healing or major adverse limb events. Clearly, the ABI provides important prognostic information, including the risk of death, myocardial infarction, and stroke ... and should be performed in all patients suspected of having PAD,” but in about 30% of patients with angiographically documented CLI, the ABI is normal or noncompressible, the authors wrote.

And, although recent data indicate that toe pressure may be a better predictor of major adverse limb events and tibial disease in patients with CLI, especially among those with isolated below-knee disease, there was no solid evidence that ABI or TBI have the sensitivity or specificity to be used as perfusion tools to assess wound healing or limb salvage, the authors stated.

[embed:render:related:node:191355]

However, there may be some technological improvements on the horizon for assessing limb perfusion that might provide eventual benefits, according to the reviewers. These include the use of indigo carmine angiography to evaluate microcirculation and angiosomal revascularization, the use of CT perfusion or MRI to quantify perfusion and monitor treatment response, the use of contrast-enhanced ultrasound to assess calf muscle perfusion, and hyperspectral imaging.

Among the other issues of concern raised in the AHA statement were the significant demographic disparities that occur in detection and treatment of CLI. The authors noted differences in how CLI is diagnosed, the coexisting conditions that were present, and the disparities in treatment given based on sex and racial differences. For example, women were more likely to experience emergency hospitalization, have differences in blood flow, and have higher disability and death rates.

As for racial disparities, the reviewers found that black and Hispanic patients with CLI were more likely to have diabetes and chronic kidney disease, and were more likely to develop gangrene, compared with white patients, who were more likely to have ulcers and pain in their legs while at rest.

In terms of treatment, black patients were 78% more likely to receive lower extremity amputation for CLI, compared with their white peers, even after adjustment for socioeconomic status, access to facilities with revascularization services, and other factors, according to the report, which was published online in Circulation.

“CLI is a complex disease process with great morbidity. This statement highlights the importance of incorporating perfusion assessment into the care of CLI patients. Despite the high prevalence of CLI, strategies for perfusion assessment remain limited. New technologies offer potential opportunities to improve the precision and quality of CLI management,” the researchers concluded.

Dr. Misra and the majority of the authors reported having no relevant disclosures. Several authors reported receiving funding from the pharmaceutical and medical device industries.

SOURCE: Chandra S. et al. Circulation. 2019;140:00-00. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000000708.

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A new assessment statement from the American Heart Association reviewed the strengths and limitations of current imaging techniques for critical limb ischemia (CLI), the severest form of peripheral arterial disease (PAD).

The main techniques discussed were the ankle-brachial index (ABI), toe-brachial index (TBI), toe systolic pressure, transcutaneous oximetry (TcPO2) and skin perfusion pressure (SPP). The literature review also identified what the authors saw as opportunities for technology improvement.

“No single vascular test has been identified as the most important predictor of wound healing or major amputation for the threatened limb,” wrote Sanjay Misra, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and colleagues, on behalf of the American Heart Association Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease, the Council on Clinical Cardiology, and the Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing.

Of particular concern were limitations seen in the use of ABI, the most widely used assessment method. “Although ABI was first described to diagnose PAD, it has not been shown to be an accurate predictor of wound healing or major adverse limb events. Clearly, the ABI provides important prognostic information, including the risk of death, myocardial infarction, and stroke ... and should be performed in all patients suspected of having PAD,” but in about 30% of patients with angiographically documented CLI, the ABI is normal or noncompressible, the authors wrote.

And, although recent data indicate that toe pressure may be a better predictor of major adverse limb events and tibial disease in patients with CLI, especially among those with isolated below-knee disease, there was no solid evidence that ABI or TBI have the sensitivity or specificity to be used as perfusion tools to assess wound healing or limb salvage, the authors stated.

[embed:render:related:node:191355]

However, there may be some technological improvements on the horizon for assessing limb perfusion that might provide eventual benefits, according to the reviewers. These include the use of indigo carmine angiography to evaluate microcirculation and angiosomal revascularization, the use of CT perfusion or MRI to quantify perfusion and monitor treatment response, the use of contrast-enhanced ultrasound to assess calf muscle perfusion, and hyperspectral imaging.

Among the other issues of concern raised in the AHA statement were the significant demographic disparities that occur in detection and treatment of CLI. The authors noted differences in how CLI is diagnosed, the coexisting conditions that were present, and the disparities in treatment given based on sex and racial differences. For example, women were more likely to experience emergency hospitalization, have differences in blood flow, and have higher disability and death rates.

As for racial disparities, the reviewers found that black and Hispanic patients with CLI were more likely to have diabetes and chronic kidney disease, and were more likely to develop gangrene, compared with white patients, who were more likely to have ulcers and pain in their legs while at rest.

In terms of treatment, black patients were 78% more likely to receive lower extremity amputation for CLI, compared with their white peers, even after adjustment for socioeconomic status, access to facilities with revascularization services, and other factors, according to the report, which was published online in Circulation.

“CLI is a complex disease process with great morbidity. This statement highlights the importance of incorporating perfusion assessment into the care of CLI patients. Despite the high prevalence of CLI, strategies for perfusion assessment remain limited. New technologies offer potential opportunities to improve the precision and quality of CLI management,” the researchers concluded.

Dr. Misra and the majority of the authors reported having no relevant disclosures. Several authors reported receiving funding from the pharmaceutical and medical device industries.

SOURCE: Chandra S. et al. Circulation. 2019;140:00-00. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000000708.

 

A new assessment statement from the American Heart Association reviewed the strengths and limitations of current imaging techniques for critical limb ischemia (CLI), the severest form of peripheral arterial disease (PAD).

The main techniques discussed were the ankle-brachial index (ABI), toe-brachial index (TBI), toe systolic pressure, transcutaneous oximetry (TcPO2) and skin perfusion pressure (SPP). The literature review also identified what the authors saw as opportunities for technology improvement.

“No single vascular test has been identified as the most important predictor of wound healing or major amputation for the threatened limb,” wrote Sanjay Misra, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and colleagues, on behalf of the American Heart Association Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease, the Council on Clinical Cardiology, and the Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing.

Of particular concern were limitations seen in the use of ABI, the most widely used assessment method. “Although ABI was first described to diagnose PAD, it has not been shown to be an accurate predictor of wound healing or major adverse limb events. Clearly, the ABI provides important prognostic information, including the risk of death, myocardial infarction, and stroke ... and should be performed in all patients suspected of having PAD,” but in about 30% of patients with angiographically documented CLI, the ABI is normal or noncompressible, the authors wrote.

And, although recent data indicate that toe pressure may be a better predictor of major adverse limb events and tibial disease in patients with CLI, especially among those with isolated below-knee disease, there was no solid evidence that ABI or TBI have the sensitivity or specificity to be used as perfusion tools to assess wound healing or limb salvage, the authors stated.

[embed:render:related:node:191355]

However, there may be some technological improvements on the horizon for assessing limb perfusion that might provide eventual benefits, according to the reviewers. These include the use of indigo carmine angiography to evaluate microcirculation and angiosomal revascularization, the use of CT perfusion or MRI to quantify perfusion and monitor treatment response, the use of contrast-enhanced ultrasound to assess calf muscle perfusion, and hyperspectral imaging.

Among the other issues of concern raised in the AHA statement were the significant demographic disparities that occur in detection and treatment of CLI. The authors noted differences in how CLI is diagnosed, the coexisting conditions that were present, and the disparities in treatment given based on sex and racial differences. For example, women were more likely to experience emergency hospitalization, have differences in blood flow, and have higher disability and death rates.

As for racial disparities, the reviewers found that black and Hispanic patients with CLI were more likely to have diabetes and chronic kidney disease, and were more likely to develop gangrene, compared with white patients, who were more likely to have ulcers and pain in their legs while at rest.

In terms of treatment, black patients were 78% more likely to receive lower extremity amputation for CLI, compared with their white peers, even after adjustment for socioeconomic status, access to facilities with revascularization services, and other factors, according to the report, which was published online in Circulation.

“CLI is a complex disease process with great morbidity. This statement highlights the importance of incorporating perfusion assessment into the care of CLI patients. Despite the high prevalence of CLI, strategies for perfusion assessment remain limited. New technologies offer potential opportunities to improve the precision and quality of CLI management,” the researchers concluded.

Dr. Misra and the majority of the authors reported having no relevant disclosures. Several authors reported receiving funding from the pharmaceutical and medical device industries.

SOURCE: Chandra S. et al. Circulation. 2019;140:00-00. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000000708.

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FDA update: Higher late mortality with paclitaxel-coated devices

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Tue, 09/10/2019 - 10:25

 

Paclitaxel-coated devices, which are used to treat peripheral artery disease (PAD), appear to have a nearly 60% higher mortality risk than uncoated devices, according to a letter to health care providers from the Food and Drug Administration.

FDA_icon3_web.jpg

This letter updates details about long-term follow-up data and panel conclusions reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration, as well as recommendations from the agency regarding these devices. On Jan. 17, 2019, the FDA notified providers regarding an apparent increased late mortality risk seen with paclitaxel-eluting stents and paclitaxel-coated balloons placed in the femoropopliteal artery in patients with PAD. The agency issued an update March 15.

In a public meeting June 19-20, the Circulatory System Devices Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory Committee discussed long-term follow-up data that demonstrated a 57% relative increase in mortality among PAD patients treated with paclitaxel-coated devices when compared with those receiving uncoated devices. The panel concluded that the late mortality signal was real and warranted further study and action, a conclusion with which the FDA has concurred.

Among other recommendations issued by the FDA, health care professionals should continue to closely monitor patients who’ve already received the devices and fully discuss the risks and benefits of these devices with patients. The FDA has decided that, given the demonstrated short-term benefits of these devices, clinical studies may continue and should collect long-term safety and effectiveness data.

The magnitude of this late mortality signal should be interpreted with caution, the FDA noted in the update, because of the wide confidence intervals (although the relative risk was 1.57, the 95% confidence interval was 1.16-2.13, which translates to 16%-113% higher relative risk), pooling studies of different devices that weren’t meant to be combined, missing data, and other reasons.

The full letter, including more detailed data and the full list of recommendations, is available on the FDA’s website.

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Paclitaxel-coated devices, which are used to treat peripheral artery disease (PAD), appear to have a nearly 60% higher mortality risk than uncoated devices, according to a letter to health care providers from the Food and Drug Administration.

FDA_icon3_web.jpg

This letter updates details about long-term follow-up data and panel conclusions reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration, as well as recommendations from the agency regarding these devices. On Jan. 17, 2019, the FDA notified providers regarding an apparent increased late mortality risk seen with paclitaxel-eluting stents and paclitaxel-coated balloons placed in the femoropopliteal artery in patients with PAD. The agency issued an update March 15.

In a public meeting June 19-20, the Circulatory System Devices Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory Committee discussed long-term follow-up data that demonstrated a 57% relative increase in mortality among PAD patients treated with paclitaxel-coated devices when compared with those receiving uncoated devices. The panel concluded that the late mortality signal was real and warranted further study and action, a conclusion with which the FDA has concurred.

Among other recommendations issued by the FDA, health care professionals should continue to closely monitor patients who’ve already received the devices and fully discuss the risks and benefits of these devices with patients. The FDA has decided that, given the demonstrated short-term benefits of these devices, clinical studies may continue and should collect long-term safety and effectiveness data.

The magnitude of this late mortality signal should be interpreted with caution, the FDA noted in the update, because of the wide confidence intervals (although the relative risk was 1.57, the 95% confidence interval was 1.16-2.13, which translates to 16%-113% higher relative risk), pooling studies of different devices that weren’t meant to be combined, missing data, and other reasons.

The full letter, including more detailed data and the full list of recommendations, is available on the FDA’s website.

 

Paclitaxel-coated devices, which are used to treat peripheral artery disease (PAD), appear to have a nearly 60% higher mortality risk than uncoated devices, according to a letter to health care providers from the Food and Drug Administration.

FDA_icon3_web.jpg

This letter updates details about long-term follow-up data and panel conclusions reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration, as well as recommendations from the agency regarding these devices. On Jan. 17, 2019, the FDA notified providers regarding an apparent increased late mortality risk seen with paclitaxel-eluting stents and paclitaxel-coated balloons placed in the femoropopliteal artery in patients with PAD. The agency issued an update March 15.

In a public meeting June 19-20, the Circulatory System Devices Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory Committee discussed long-term follow-up data that demonstrated a 57% relative increase in mortality among PAD patients treated with paclitaxel-coated devices when compared with those receiving uncoated devices. The panel concluded that the late mortality signal was real and warranted further study and action, a conclusion with which the FDA has concurred.

Among other recommendations issued by the FDA, health care professionals should continue to closely monitor patients who’ve already received the devices and fully discuss the risks and benefits of these devices with patients. The FDA has decided that, given the demonstrated short-term benefits of these devices, clinical studies may continue and should collect long-term safety and effectiveness data.

The magnitude of this late mortality signal should be interpreted with caution, the FDA noted in the update, because of the wide confidence intervals (although the relative risk was 1.57, the 95% confidence interval was 1.16-2.13, which translates to 16%-113% higher relative risk), pooling studies of different devices that weren’t meant to be combined, missing data, and other reasons.

The full letter, including more detailed data and the full list of recommendations, is available on the FDA’s website.

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