Postponing non-cardiac surgery
after receiving a coronary stent reduces risk of ischemia, myocardial infarction
and death
Patients who can postpone non-cardiac surgery for at
least six weeks after receiving a coronary stent are less likely to suffer ischemia,
myocardial infarction (MI) and death than those who have surgery sooner, Scottish
researchers report in Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions, an American Heart
Association journal.
A common treatment, stents are used in more than 90 percent of angioplasty patients
in Scotland, according to the study.
In the broad retrospective study, researchers found that
42 percent of patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery within six weeks of stent
implantation were more likely to suffer heart complications, including ischemia,
MI and death. In comparison, these complications occurred in 13 percent of patients
whose surgeries were performed beyond six weeks post-implantation.
The risk of heart problems following non-cardiac surgery
was even greater among patients whose stents were inserted as treatment for a
recent MI (occurring in 65 percent of patients) than among those with stable but
chronic disease (occurring in 32 percent of patients). The type of stent - bare
metal vs. drug eluting - didn't affect risk, which was similar for the first two
years after stent implantation.
The researchers examined records for 1,953 patients, average age 64, who had received
coronary stents in Scotland between April 2003 and March 2007. They used hospital
admission data and information from the Scottish Coronary Revascularization Register.
Previous studies have found that patients who underwent
non-cardiac surgery within four to six weeks of bare-metal stent implantation
had a greater incidence of serious heart complications. However, those studies
did not clarify how long the risk persisted after stent implantation and whether
it was the same in patients with drug-eluting stents.
"These findings have important implications for a large
number of patients," said Nicholas L.M. Cruden, Ph.D., M.B., first author of the
study and cardiology lecturer at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. "In
the current study, 4.4 percent of patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention
underwent non-cardiac surgery within one year of coronary stent implantation."
Co-authors are: Scott A. Harding, M.B.; Andrew D. Flapan,
M.B., M.D.; Cat Graham, M.Sc.; Sarah H. Wild, Ph.D., M.B.; Rachel Slack, M.P.H.;
Jill P. Pell, M.B., M.D.; and David E. Newby, Ph.D., M.B. Author disclosures are
on the manuscript.
A Health Services Research Grant from the Scottish government's
Chief Scientist Office funded this study.
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