Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (May 2024)

Early silent coronary bypass graft occlusion following coronary bypass surgery, implication of routine coronary computed tomography angiography

  • Islam Salikhanov,
  • Luca Koechlin,
  • Brigitta Gahl,
  • Oliver Reuthebuch,
  • Michael Zellweger,
  • Philip Haaf,
  • Jens Bremerich,
  • Maurice Pradella,
  • Christian Müller,
  • Denis Berdajs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2024.1400637
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo evaluate incidence and predictors of early silent bypass occlusion following coronary bypass surgery using cardiac computed tomography angiography.MethodsA total of 439 consecutive patients with mean age of 66 ± 10 years comprising 17% (n = 75) females underwent isolated coronary bypass surgery followed by CT scan before discharge. Graft patency was evaluated in 1,319 anastomoses where 44% (n = 580) arterial and 56% (n = 739) vein graft anastomosis were performed. Cardiovascular risk factors, demographics, and intraoperative variables were analyzed. We conducted univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses to analyze variables potentially associated with graft occlusion following CABG. Variables included gender, surgery duration, graft flow, pulsatility index, vein vs. artery graft, and recent MI.ResultsOverall incidence of graft occlusion was 2.4% (31/1,319), and it was diagnosed in 6.6% (29/439) of patients. The difference in occlusion between arterial (2.1%) and vein (2.6%) grafts was not significant, p = 0.68. The duration of intervention p = 0.034, cross clamp time p = 0.024 as well the number of distal anastomosis p = 0.034 were significantly higher in occlusion group. The univariate and multivariate logistic regression indicated duration of surgery being predictive for bypass graft occlusion with OR = 1.18; 95% CI: 1.01–1.38; p = 0.035.ConclusionsEarly graft occlusion was associated with surgical factors. The number of distant anastamoses, along duration of surgical intervention were, significantly influenced the risk of EGO. Prolonged procedural time reflecting complex coronary pathology and time-consuming revascularization procedure was as well associated to the elevated risk of occlusion.

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