Affiliation:
1. University of Colorado School of Medicine Aurora CO
2. Department of Medicine VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System Denver CO
Abstract
Background
Patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (
PCI
) are older with greater medical comorbidities and anatomical complexity than ever before, resulting in an increased frequency of nonemergent high‐risk
PCI
(
HR
‐
PCI
). We thus sought to evaluate the temporal trends in performance of
HR
‐
PCI
and utilization of mechanical circulatory support in the largest integrated healthcare system in the United States.
Methods and Results
A cohort of high‐risk adult patients that underwent nonemergent
PCI
in the Veterans Affairs Healthcare System between January 2008 and June 2018 were identified by objective clinical, hemodynamic, and anatomic criteria. Temporal trends in the performance of
HR
‐
PCI
, utilization of mechanical circulatory support, and site‐level variation were assessed. Of 111 548 patients assessed during the study period, 554 met 3 high‐risk criteria whereas 4414 met at least 2 criteria for
HR
‐
PCI
. There was a significant linear increase in the proportion of interventions that met 3 (
P
<0.001) or at least 2 (
P
<0.001) high‐risk criteria over time, with rates approaching 1.9% and 11.2% in the last full calendar year analyzed. A minority of patients who met all high‐risk criteria received
PCI
with mechanical support (15.7%) without a significant increase over time (
P
=0.193). However, there was significant site‐level variation in the probability of performing
HR
‐
PCI
(4.0‐fold higher likelihood) and utilizing mechanical circulatory support (1.9‐fold higher likelihood) between high and low utilization sites.
Conclusions
The proportion of cases categorized as
HR
‐
PCI
has increased over time, with significant site‐level variation in performance. The majority of
HR
‐
PCI
cases did not utilize mechanical support, highlighting a discrepancy between current recommendations and clinical practice in an integrated healthcare system.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
13 articles.
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