Randomised trial of stable chest pain investigation: 3-year clinical and quality of life results from CE-MARC 2

Author:

Everett Colin C.,Berry Colin,McCann Gerry P.ORCID,Fernandez Catherine,Reynolds Catherine,Bucciarelli-Ducci Chiara,Dall’Armellina Erica,Prasad Abhiram,Foley James R.,Mangion Kenneth,Bijsterveld Petra,Brown Julia,Stocken Deborah,Walker SimonORCID,Sculpher Mark,Plein Sven,Greenwood John P.ORCID

Abstract

AimsGuidelines for suspected cardiac chest pain have used historical risk stratification tools, advocating invasive coronary angiography (ICA) first-line in those at highest risk. We aimed to determine whether different strategies to manage suspected stable angina affected medium-term cardiovascular event rates and patient-reported quality of life (QoL) measures.MethodsCE-MARC 2, a three-arm parallel group trial, randomised patients with suspected stable cardiac chest pain and a Duke Clinical pretest likelihood of coronary artery disease between 10% and 90%. Patients were randomised to either first-line cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) or the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) CG95 (2010) guidelines-directed care. For the three arms, 1-year and 3-year first major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE) rates and QoL assessed by the Seattle Angina Questionnaire, Short Form 12 (V.12) Questionnaire and EuroQol-5 Dimension Questionnaire were recorded.Results1202 patients were randomised to CMR (n=481), SPECT (n=481) and NICE (n=240). Forty-two patients (18 CMR, 18 SPECT, 6 NICE) experienced one or more MACEs. The percentage rates (95% CIs) of MACE in the CMR, SPECT and NICE groups at 3 years were 3.7% (2.4%, 5.8%), 3.7% (2.4%, 5.8%) and 2.1% (0.9%, 4.8%), respectively. QoL scores did not significantly differ across domains.ConclusionDespite a fourfold increase in referrals for ICA, the NICE CG95 (2010) guidelines risk-stratified care strategy did not significantly reduce 3-year MACE or improve QoL, as compared with functional imaging with CMR or SPECT.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov Registry (NCT01664858).

Funder

British Heart Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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