Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Offers Clinical Benefits to Diabetic Patients With Stable Chronic Total Occlusion

Author:

Yan Yunfeng1,Yuan Fei1,Liu Xinmin1,Luo Taiyang1,Feng Xu1,Yao Jing1,Zhang Mingduo1,Gu Feifei2,Song Guangyuan1,Lyu Shuzheng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Capital Medical University, Beijing Institute of Heart, Lung and Blood Vessel Diseases, Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Beijing, China

2. Department of Cardiology, Emergency General Hospital, Beijing, China

Abstract

Whether percutaneous coronary intervention for chronic total occlusion (CTO-PCI) in diabetic patients offers more benefits compared with initial medical therapy (CTO-MT) is unclear. In this study, diabetic patients with one CTO (clinical manifestations: stable angina or silent ischemia) were enrolled. Consecutively, enrolled patients ( n = 1605) were assigned to different groups: CTO-PCI (1044 [65.0%]) and initial CTO-MT (561 [35%]). After a median follow-up of 44 months, CTO-PCI tended to be superior to initial CTO-MT in major adverse cardiovascular events (adjusted hazard-ratio [aHR]: .81, 95% conference-interval: .65–1.02) and significantly superior in cardiac death (aHR: .58 [.39–.87]) and all-cause death (aHR: .678[.473–.970]). Such superiority mainly attributed to a successful CTO-PCI. CTO-PCI tended to be performed in patients with younger age, good collaterals, left anterior descending branch CTO, and right coronary artery CTO. While, those with left circumflex CTO and severe clinical/angiographic situations were more likely to be assigned to initial CTO-MT. However, none of these variables influenced the benefits of CTO-PCI. Thus, we concluded that for diabetic patients with stable CTO, CTO-PCI (mainly successful CTO-PCI) offered patients survival benefits over initial CTO-MT. These benefits were consistent regardless of clinical/angiographic characteristics.

Funder

The Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China, State Science and Technology Support Program

the Beijing Lab for Cardiovascular Precision Medicine, Beijing, China

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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