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Elsevier - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Elsevier - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2020 Oct 22;76(17):B98–B99. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.09.241

TCT CONNECT-226 In-Hospital Outcomes of CABG Candidates Undergoing PCI During the ICU Restricted COVID-19 Pandemic: The Multi-Center Prospective UK-REVASC Registry

Thomas Kite 1, Andrew Ladwiniec 2, Helen Routledge 3, Stephen Hoole 4, Nick Palmer 5, Mohaned Egred 6, Divaka Perera 7, Kyriacos Mouyis 8, Manas Sinha 9, Luciano Candilio 10, Brijesh Anantharam 11, Aengus Murphy 12, Farzin Fath-Ordoubadi 13, Paul Das 14, Paul Morris 15, Nick Curzen 16, Diana Gorog 17, Angela Hoye 18, Charley Budgeon 19, Gregg Stone 20, Colin Berry 21, Anthony Gershlick 2
PMCID: PMC7581372

Background

The coronavirus disease-2019 pandemic has restricted availability of intensive care unit resources. Symptomatic patients with coronary artery disease considered surgical candidates have therefore needed revascularization with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We describe demographics/in-hospital clinical outcomes of this novel cohort.

Methods

From March 1, 2020, to May 31, 2020, anonymized data of 171 patients in 38 U.K. centers were enrolled in a prospective registry. All were considered surgical candidates.

Results

Tables 1-3 show demographics, procedural characteristics, and outcomes. A comparison with routine PCI (British Cardiovascular Intervention Society data) and U.K. coronary bypass surgical data are listed if available and appropriate. There was significantly more prior myocardial infarction, PCI, and coronary artery bypass graft in the routine PCI database than in ReVasc Registry patients, suggesting more acute presentation in latter group. However, these were complex patients — mean SYNTAX score of 27.8 (range 9 to 65); and >20 times the number of LMS plus multivessel disease compared to the routine PCI group, with high use of adjunctive imaging. Radial use was high at 94.1%. PCI success was 97.0%. Complete revascularization was 52% and residual SYNTAX score 1.42 (0 to 20). The 2 deaths were acute, and mortality rate comparable to published surgical data. A 50% reduction in in-patient stay was observed.

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Conclusion

In this multicenter U.K. registry, in-hospital outcomes with PCI for patients with complex coronary disease, normally treated with coronary artery bypass graft, compared well with surgical data suggesting the role of PCI could be extended. Future long-term follow-up is planned.

Categories

CORONARY: Complex and Higher Risk Procedures for Indicated Patients (CHIP)


Articles from Journal of the American College of Cardiology are provided here courtesy of Elsevier

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