Stable Coronary Artery Disease: Who Finally Benefits from Coronary Revascularization in the Modern Era? The ISCHEMIA and Interim ISCHEMIA-EXTEND Analysis
Leonid Bershtein,
Alexey Sumin,
Elizaveta Zbyshevskaya,
Victoria Gumerova,
Darejan Tsurtsumia,
Igor Kochanov,
Alina Andreeva,
Vartan Piltakian,
Sergey Sayganov
Affiliations
Leonid Bershtein
Department of Internal Medicine & Cardiology, North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Alexey Sumin
Federal State Budgetary Institution “Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Disease”, Sosnovy Blvd. 6, 650002 Kemerovo, Russia
Elizaveta Zbyshevskaya
Department of Internal Medicine & Cardiology, North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Victoria Gumerova
Department of Internal Medicine & Cardiology, North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Darejan Tsurtsumia
Department of Internal Medicine #1, North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Igor Kochanov
Department of Interventional Cardiology, North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Alina Andreeva
Department of Functional Diagnostics, North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Vartan Piltakian
St. Petersburg State Budgetary Healthcare Institution ‘Pokrovskaya City Hospital’, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia
Sergey Sayganov
North-Western State Medical University named after II Mechnikov, 191015 St. Petersburg, Russia
Coronary revascularization is one of the most studied treatment modalities in cardiology; however, there is no consensus among experts about its indications in patients with stable coronary artery disease (SCAD). Contemporary data regarding the role of revascularization in SCAD are in clear conflict with the current European guidelines. This article discusses the main statements of the most significant American and European Guidelines on myocardial revascularization of the last decade and also analyzes the appropriateness of revascularization to improve the prognosis and symptoms in SCAD in the light of new research data, primarily the ISCHEMIA study (NCT01471522) and the ACC/AHA 2021 Revascularization Guidelines based on them. Data on the revascularization in SCAD obtained after the completion of ISCHEMIA (including the interim analysis of ISCHEMIA-EXTEND) and their potential significance are discussed. The results of ISCHEMIA sub-analyses in the most important “controversial” subgroups (3-vessel disease, proximal left anterior descending artery disease, strongly positive stress test, etc.) are reviewed, as are the results of the ISCHEMIA-CKD substudy in patients with severe chronic kidney disease (CKD).