Open Heart (Feb 2021)

Invasive versus medically managed acute coronary syndromes with prior bypass (CABG-ACS): insights into the registry versus randomised trial populations

  • Mark C Petrie,
  • Colin Berry,
  • Kenneth Mangion,
  • Alex McConnachie,
  • Ian Ford,
  • Olivia Wu,
  • Paul Rocchiccioli,
  • Aadil Shaukat,
  • Matthew M Y Lee,
  • Joanne Simpson,
  • Colette E Jackson,
  • David S Corcoran,
  • Ammani Brown,
  • Pio Cialdella,
  • Novalia P Sidik,
  • Margaret B McEntegart,
  • Alan P Rae,
  • Stuart H M Hood,
  • Eileen E Peat,
  • Iain N Findlay,
  • Clare L Murphy,
  • Alistair J Cormack,
  • Nikolay B Bukov,
  • Kanarath P Balachandran,
  • Sarah J E Barry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2020-001453
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) patients are under-represented in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) trials. We compared characteristics and outcomes for patients who did and did not participate in a randomised trial of invasive versus non-invasive management (CABG-ACS).Methods ACS patients with prior CABG in four hospitals were randomised to invasive or non-invasive management. Non-randomised patients entered a registry. Primary efficacy (composite of all-cause mortality, rehospitalisation for refractory ischaemia/angina, myocardial infarction (MI), heart failure) and safety outcomes (composite of bleeding, stroke, procedure-related MI, worsening renal function) were independently adjudicated.Results Of 217 patients screened, 84 (39%) screenfailed, of whom 24 (29%) did not consent and 60 (71%) were ineligible. Of 133 (61%) eligible, 60 (mean±SD age, 71±9 years, 72% male) entered the trial and 73 (age, 72±10 years, 73% male) entered a registry (preferences: physician (79%), patient (38%), both (21%)).Compared with trial participants, registry patients had more valve disease, lower haemoglobin, worse New York Heart Association class and higher frailty.At baseline, invasive management was performed in 52% and 49% trial and registry patients, respectively, of whom 32% and 36% had percutaneous coronary intervention at baseline, respectively (p=0.800). After 2 years follow-up (694 (median, IQR 558–841) days), primary efficacy (43% trial vs 49% registry (HR 1.14, 95% CI 0.69 to 1.89)) and safety outcomes (28% trial vs 22% registry (HR 0.74, 95% CI 0.37 to 1.46)) were similar. EuroQol was lower in registry patients at 1 year.Conclusions Compared with trial participants, registry participants had excess morbidity, but longer-term outcomes were similar.Trial registration number NCT01895751.