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Multicenter Study
. 2024 Jun;34(6):4127-4141.
doi: 10.1007/s00330-023-10355-2. Epub 2023 Nov 22.

Impact of smoking in patients with suspected coronary artery disease in the randomised DISCHARGE trial

Massimo Mancone #  1 Aldo J Vázquez Mézquita #  2 Lucia Ilaria Birtolo #  1 Pal Maurovich-Horvat  3   4 Klaus F Kofoed  5   6 Theodora Benedek  7   8 Patrick Donnelly  9 Jose Rodriguez-Palomares  10   11 Andrejs Erglis  12   13 Cyril Štěchovský  14 Gintare Šakalytė  15   16 Nada Čemerlić Ađić  17   18 Matthias Gutberlet  19 Ignacio Diez  20 Gershan Davis  21   22 Elke Zimmermann  2 Cezary Kępka  23 Radosav Vidakovic  24   25 Marco Francone  26   27 Małgorzata Ilnicka-Suckiel  28 Fabian Plank  29   30 Juhanni Knuuti  31 Rita Faria  32 Stephen Schröder  33 Colin Berry  34   35 Luca Saba  36 Balazs Ruzsics  37   38 Nina Rieckmann  39 Christine Kubiak  40 Kristian Schultz Hansen  41 Jaqueline Müller-Nordhorn  42 Bela Merkely  3   4 Per E Sigvardsen  5   6 Imre Benedek  43 Clare Orr  9 Filipa Xavier Valente  10   11 Ligita Zvaigzne  12 Vojtěch Suchánek  44 Antanas Jankauskas  45 Filip Ađić  17   18 Michael Woinke  46 Stephen Keane  47 Ignacio Lecumberri  48 Erica Thwaite  49 Mariusz Kruk  23 Vladimir Jovanovic  24 Donata Kuśmierz  50 Gudren Feuchtner  30 Mikko Pietilä  51   52 Vasco Gama Ribeiro  32 Tanja Drosch  33 Christian Delles  34 Vitanio Palmisano  36   53 Michael Fisher  37   38 Zsófia D Drobni  3 Charlotte Kragelund  54 Rosca Aurelian  7 Stephanie Kelly  9 Bruno Garcia Del Blanco  10   11 Ainhoa Rubio  20 Melinda Boussoussou  3 Jens D Hove  55   56 Ioana Rodean  43 Susan Regan  9 Hug Cuéllar Calabria  10 Dávid Becker  3 Linnea Larsen  57 Roxana Hodas  7 Adriane E Napp  2 Robert Haase  2 Sarah Feger  2 Mahmoud Mohamed  2 Konrad Neumann  58 Henryk Dreger  59   60 Matthias Rief  2 Viktoria Wieske  2 Pamela S Douglas  61 Melanie Estrella  2 Maria Bosserdt  2 Peter Martus  62 Lina M Serna-Higuita #  62 Jonathan D Dodd #  63   64 Marc Dewey #  2   65   66   67   68
Affiliations
Multicenter Study

Impact of smoking in patients with suspected coronary artery disease in the randomised DISCHARGE trial

Massimo Mancone et al. Eur Radiol. 2024 Jun.

Abstract

Objectives: To investigate if the effect of cardiac computed tomography (CT) vs. invasive coronary angiography (ICA) on cardiovascular events differs based on smoking status.

Materials and methods: This pre-specified subgroup analysis of the pragmatic, prospective, multicentre, randomised DISCHARGE trial (NCT02400229) involved 3561 patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). The primary endpoint was major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE: cardiovascular death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, or stroke). Secondary endpoints included an expanded MACE composite (MACE, transient ischaemic attack, or major procedure-related complications).

Results: Of 3445 randomised patients with smoking data (mean age 59.1 years + / - 9.7, 1151 men), at 3.5-year follow-up, the effect of CT vs. ICA on MACE was consistent across smoking groups (p for interaction = 0.98). The percutaneous coronary intervention rate was significantly lower with a CT-first strategy in smokers and former smokers (p = 0.01 for both). A CT-first strategy reduced the hazard of major procedure-related complications (HR: 0.21, 95% CI: 0.03, 0.81; p = 0.045) across smoking groups. In current smokers, the expanded MACE composite was lower in the CT- compared to the ICA-first strategy (2.3% (8) vs 6.0% (18), HR: 0.38; 95% CI: 0.17, 0.88). The rate of non-obstructive CAD was significantly higher in all three smoking groups in the CT-first strategy.

Conclusion: For patients with stable chest pain referred for ICA, the clinical outcomes of CT were consistent across smoking status. The CT-first approach led to a higher detection rate of non-obstructive CAD and fewer major procedure-related complications in smokers.

Clinical relevance statement: This pre-specified sub-analysis of the DISCHARGE trial confirms that a CT-first strategy in patients with stable chest pain referred for invasive coronary angiography with an intermediate pre-test probability of coronary artery disease is as effective as and safer than invasive coronary angiography, irrespective of smoking status.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02400229.

Key points: • No randomised studies have assessed smoking status on CT effectiveness in symptomatic patients referred for invasive coronary angiography. • A CT-first strategy results in comparable adverse events, fewer complications, and increased coronary artery disease detection, irrespective of smoking status. • A CT-first strategy is safe and effective for stable chest pain patients with intermediate pre-test probability for CAD, including never smokers.

Keywords: Cardiac catheterisation; Cardiac imaging techniques; Cardiovascular disease; Cigarette smoking; Computed tomography angiography.

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