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Multi-vessel disease… Le Mans implications. Oxford. The John Radcliffe Hospital. Dr Adrian Banning. Multi-vessel disease… Le Mans - implications ?. Lemans trial J Am Coll Cardiol 2008 Small randomised trial of CABG vs PCI for patients with left main disease Syntax Lemans
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Multi-vessel disease… Le Mans implications Oxford The John Radcliffe Hospital Dr Adrian Banning
Multi-vessel disease…Le Mans - implications ? • Lemans trial J Am Coll Cardiol 2008 • Small randomised trial of CABG vs PCI for patients with left main disease • Syntax Lemans • Subset of the Syntax trial • patients with left main disease • follow up angios at 15 months (both surgical and PCI) • To be reported at PCR 09
Why is the Left Main important? It supplies at least 2/3 of the blood to the heart!!!
Why is the left main special? • Large vessel • Prone to calcification • Large volume of plaque required to cause stenosis • Intubated by the diagnostic catheter –ostium? • By definition terminates in a bifurcation – at least • Untreated LMS stenosis > 20% mortality at 1yr
Results of initial intervention on the LMS- the early years • 1980s Hartzler using POBA • 10% procedural mortality in hospital • 64% 3yr mortality • Early 1993-8 ULTIMA • 279 pts unprotected LMS • 14% procedural mortality in hospital • 25% mortality at one year • NB if 46% inoperable are excluded – • 97% 1yr survival in these low risk pts
Stent the LMS with BMS safe, but high rate of MACE due to restenosis Am J Cardiol. 2003;91:12-6.
A Randomized Comparison of Paclitaxel-ElutingStents Versus Bare-Metal Stents for Treatmentof Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery Stenosis • 103 patients • BMS (n 50) or PES (n 53). • All IVUS guidance and Cutting balloon pretreatment x 3 to cover entire lesion • Ostium and body were treated with a single stent Single stent 49/50 and 52/53 Final kissing balloon dilation was performed only in cases with suboptimal result at the LCX ostium (6% and 19%) • Follow-up: 6 months angio and IVUS • No “late” stent thrombosis in either group Erglis et al JACC 2007
A Randomized Comparison of Paclitaxel-ElutingStents Versus Bare-Metal Stents for Treatmentof Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery Stenosis Erglis et al JACC 2007
A Randomized Comparison of Paclitaxel-ElutingStents Versus Bare-Metal Stents for Treatmentof Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery Stenosis Erglis et al JACC 2007
A Randomized Comparison of Paclitaxel-ElutingStents Versus Bare-Metal Stents for Treatmentof Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery Stenosis Erglis et al JACC 2007
A Randomized Comparison of Paclitaxel-ElutingStents Versus Bare-Metal Stents for Treatmentof Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery Stenosis Erglis et al JACC 2007
Location matters Ostium Distal- bifurcation Shaft
What makes the left main special? • Anatomy matters • Ostial Needs 1 stent • Body Needs 1 stent • Bifurcation Usually >1 stent, 2 wires, >6F
Long-Term Outcome After DES in Nonbifurcation Lesions that involve Unprotected LMS • Population: 147 pts • elective (only) consecutive pts SES or PES in 5 centers • - stenosis in the ostium and/or the mid-shaft of an unprotected LMCA • PCI instead of surgery was considered either (1) suitable anatomy for stenting and preference patient and physician (2) suitable anatomy for stenting and EuroSCORE 6 and/or Parsonnet score 13 and/or prior bypass surgery with failure of all conduits (n=2). Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary • Medications: • IIb/IIIa inhibitors at the discretion of the operator. • Dual antiplatelet therapy for at least 6 months after. All patients were advised to maintain lifelong use of aspirin (100 mg/d). • Clinicalfollow-up: at 1, 6, 12, and 24 months. • Patients eligible for longer clinical follow-up were contacted at 36 and 48 months. • Angiofollow-up: 4 and 9 months or earlier if neccesary • Total follow up mean 886 days Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary No proven late stent thrombosis 4 unexpected deaths Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
Favorable Long-Term Outcome After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Nonbifurcation Lesions That Involve Unprotected Left Main Coronary Chieffo et al Circulation 2007
What about late stent thrombosis in LMS disease? • Specific worries • Late thrombosis for all DES >BMS • Late thrombosis higher off label • Higher risk of incomplete expansion? • Left main occlusion will be fatal • Reassurances • Big vessel
Late and very late stent thrombosis following DES in ULM.Chieffo et al, EHJ Sept 2008. • Multicentre registry of 731 pts with Elective DES stenting of ULM disease. • Definite ST • 4 pts (0.5%). 3 early (≤30d), 1 late (≤ 1 yr). No VLST. • Probable ST = 3 pts. All early (≤30d) • Definite or probable ST = 7 / 731 = 0.95% • All were on dual AP Rx. • Possible ST • (8 late, 12 very late) in 20 (2.7%) pts.
Late and very late stent thrombosis following DES in ULM.Chieffo et al, EHJ Sept 2008. • Outcomes after 29.5±13.7 months follow up: • Death: 6.2% (n=45). • Cardiac death: 4.2% (n=31) • TVR: 12.9% (n=95) • TLR: 10.9% (n=76) • Restenosis rate: 14.1% on angiographic follow-up of 548 pts. (NB: 76% of lesions involved the distal LM.) • Predictors of ST at logistic analysis: • Euroscore • LVEF • Consistent with general PCI population. • No unique ST predictor among ULM pts identified in this analysis. • Conclusion: Elective DES stenting of ULM is safe - low rates of ST.
358 consecutive patients 7 centres All DES
Elective Urgent MACE free 74% 68% Mortality 6% 21% Reinfarction 8% 10% TLR 7% 3% TVR 16% 7% Delft J Am Coll Cardiol 2008 ; 51 2212-9
Unprotected left main stenting vs CABGSeung et al, NEJM April 2008. • Long term follow up of 1102 patients stenting for ULM disease, • vs propensity-matched cohort of CABG patients • No significant difference in the risk of death and the composite outcome of death, Q-wave MI, or stroke between the two groups. • TVR higher in the stents group, even with DES. Seung KB et al. N Engl J Med 2008;358:1781-1792
Study of unprotected LEft MAiNStenting versus bypass surgery J Am Coll Cardiol 2008; 51: 538-45
PCI technique Direct stenting preferred if not poss predil with 2 or 2.5 Bifurcation technique Initial stent to LAD then Cullotte or Prov T if necessary No crush stenting IVUS advised DES if diameter < 3.8mm (35%) LeMans study 2008
Improved EF with PCIETT similar by 12 months more angina PCI initially Lemans trial 2008
SYNTAX Eligible Patients De novo disease • Limited Exclusion Criteria • Previous interventions • Acute MI with CPK>2x • Concomitant cardiac surgery Left Main Disease (isolated, +1, +2 or +3 vessels) 3 Vessel Disease (revasc all 3 vascular territories)
Syntax Lemans (reports PCR 09) • All left main pts in the randomised Syntax n=710 • Follow up angio at 15 months • Asses late angio outcomes with clinical outcomes • Asses utility of angio follow up • Stats • Surgery occlusion rate rate 5-12% • 100 surgery pts 95% confidence interval (+/-0.043) if occlusion is 5% or (+/-0.043) if occlusion is 12% • PCI Expected Patency rate 74-97% • 100 PCI pts 95% confidence interval (+/-0.078) if patency is 80% • Expected attrition 30%
CABG TAXUS Left Main Isolated Left Main + 3VD N=91 (13%) Left Main + 1VD N=258 (37%) N=138 (20%) Left Main + 2VD N=218 (31%) 12 Month LM Subgroup MACCE Rates Patients (%) All LMN=705
CABG TAXUS 12 Month Subgroup MACCE Rates Patients (%) 3VD (All) N=1095 LM+3VD N=258 All LMN=705 LM isolatedN=91 LM+1VDN=138 LM+2VDN=218
So why is the left main special? • The left main is unforgiving during PCI • Because large volumes of myocardium are at risk • Large volumes of plaque may move • Calcification is restrictive to stent expansion • loss of “branches” will have immediate and profound haemodynamic consequences • The left main is unforgiving in the long term • All ostial disease has a very high restenosis rate (particularly if the stent is incompletely expanded).
What do we know about left main PCI? • Procedural risk fallen from 10-20% to <1% (in all but shock cases) • Ostial and shaft disease is different to terminal disease of the main • Left main PCI should be definitely considered in all emergency cases and many urgent cases
What do we know about left main PCI in 2008? • DES are almost certainly better than BMS • Risks of treating left main disease with PCI or surgery are probably the same • Long term results of DES in elective ostial and shaft disease are very encouraging • Those cases treatable with one properly expanded stent
What do we know about left main PCI in 2008? • However • How do we treat distal bifurcation disease best? • Perhaps the cullotte? Not the crush for me • LMS + 2VD / 3VD • surgery still has lower rates of TVR particularly in diabetics