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Clinical Trial
. 1993 Jul 1;72(1):14-20.
doi: 10.1016/0002-9149(93)90211-t.

Usefulness of quantitative and qualitative angiographic lesion morphology, and clinical characteristics in predicting major adverse cardiac events during and after native coronary balloon angioplasty. CARPORT and MERCATOR Study Groups

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Usefulness of quantitative and qualitative angiographic lesion morphology, and clinical characteristics in predicting major adverse cardiac events during and after native coronary balloon angioplasty. CARPORT and MERCATOR Study Groups

W R Hermans et al. Am J Cardiol. .

Abstract

Major, adverse cardiac events (death, myocardial infarction, bypass surgery and reintervention) occur in 4 to 7% of all patients undergoing coronary balloon angioplasty. Prospectively collected clinical data, and angiographic quantitative and qualitative lesion morphologic assessment and procedural factors were examined to determine whether the occurrence of these events could be predicted. Of 1,442 patients undergoing balloon angioplasty for native primary coronary disease in 2 European multicenter trials, 69 had major, adverse cardiac procedural or in-hospital complications after > or = 1 balloon inflation and were randomly matched with patients who completed an uncomplicated in-hospital course after successful angioplasty. No quantitative angiographic variable was associated with major adverse cardiac events in univariate and multivariate analyses. Univariate analysis showed that major adverse cardiac events were associated with the following preprocedural variables: (1) unstable angina (odds ratio [OR] 3.11; p < 0.0001), (2) type C lesion (OR 2.53; p < 0.004), (3) lesion location at a bend > 45 degrees (OR 2.34; p < 0.004), and (4) stenosis located in the middle segment of the artery dilated (OR 1.88; p < 0.03); and with the following postprocedural variable: angiographically visible dissection (OR 5.39; p < 0.0001). Multivariate logistic analysis was performed to identify variables independently correlated with the occurrence of major adverse cardiac events. The preprocedural multivariate model entered unstable angina (OR 3.77; p < 0.0003), lesions located at a bend > 45 degrees (OR 2.87; p < 0.0005), and stenosis located in the middle portion of the artery dilated (OR 1.95; p < 0.04).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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