219 results on '"Steg, P.G."'
Search Results
2. Burden of dementia, chronic kidney disease and cardiovascular diseases attributable to systolic hypertension in France
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Grave, C., primary, Bonaldi, C., additional, Carcaillon-Bentata, L., additional, Gabet, A., additional, Steg, P.G., additional, Zaleski, I. Durand, additional, Blacher, J., additional, and Olié, V., additional
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- 2024
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3. Incidence and predictors of in-hospital complications after myocardial infraction in contemporary clinical practice: Findings from the FRENCHIE myocardial infarction cohort
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Lemesle, G., primary, Cayla, G., additional, Gallet de Saint Aurin, R., additional, Nekrouf, C., additional, Rousseau, A., additional, Ducrocq, G., additional, Angoulvant, D., additional, Coste, P., additional, Boccara, F., additional, Lhermusier, T., additional, Barone Rochette, G., additional, Dubreuil, O., additional, Steg, P.G., additional, Danchin, N., additional, and Simon, T., additional
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- 2024
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4. SA1 In Silico Clinical Trials Using Mechanistic Knowledge-Based Model, an Innovative Approach to Accelerate Data Generation and Support Health Technology Assessment
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Pham, E., primary, Porte, S., additional, Courcelles, E., additional, Peyronnet, E., additional, Wang, Y., additional, Diatchenko, A., additional, Gomez, G., additional, Amarenco, P., additional, Angoulvant, D., additional, Boccara, F., additional, Cariou, B., additional, Mahé, G., additional, Marie-Natacha, M., additional, Bastien, A., additional, Portal, L., additional, Boissel, J.P., additional, Bechet, E., additional, Granjeon-Noriot, S., additional, and Steg, P.G., additional
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- 2023
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5. Alirocumab and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients With Previous Myocardial Infarction: Prespecified Subanalysis From ODYSSEY OUTCOMES
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Chiang, C.E., Schwartz, G.G., Elbez, Y., Szarek, M., Bhatt, D.L., Bittner, V.A., Diaz, R., Erglis, A., Goodman, S.G., Hagstrom, E., Jukema, J.W., Liberopoulos, E., Loy, M., Pordy, R., White, H.D., Simon, T., Steg, P.G., and ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators
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Male ,Kardiologi ,Treatment Outcome ,Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems ,Female ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: After acute coronary syndrome (ACS), patients with a previous myocardial infarction (MI) may be at particularly high risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and death. We studied the effects of the PCSK9 inhibitor alirocumab in patients with recent ACS according to previous history of MI..Methods: The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial compared alirocumab with placebo, beginning 1 to 12 months after ACS with median 2.8-year follow-up. The primary MACE outcome comprised death from coronary heart disease, nonfatal MI, fatal or nonfatal ischemic stroke, and hospitalization for unstable angina. Of 18,924 patients, 3633 (19.2%) had previous MI. Results: Patients with previous MI were older, more likely male, with more cardiovascular risk factors and previous events. With placebo, 4-year risks of MACE and death were higher among those with vs without previous MI (20.5% vs 8.9%, P < 0.001; 7.4% vs 3.4%, P < 0.001, respectively). Alirocumab reduced the risk of events regardless of the presence or absence of a history of MI (MACE, adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.90, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.78-1.05 vs 0.82, 0.73-0.92; P-interaction = 0.34; death, aHR 0.84; 95% CI, 0.64-1.08 vs 0.87, 0.72-1.05; P-interaction = 0.81). Estimated absolute risk reductions with alirocumab were numerically greater with vs without previous MI (MACE, 1.91% vs 1.42%; death, 1.35% vs 0.41%). Conclusions: A previous history of MI places patients with recent ACS at high risk for recurrent MACE and death. Alirocumab reduced the relative risks of these events consistently in patients with or without previous MI but with numerically greater absolute benefit in the former subgroup. (ODYSSEY OUTCOMES: NCT01663402)
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- 2022
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6. Relation of red blood cell distribution width to risk of major adverse cardiovascular events, death, and effect of alirocumab after acute coronary syndromes
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Moriarty, P.M., Steg, P.G., McGinniss, J., Zeiher, A.M., White, H.D., Manvelian, G., Pordy, R., Loy, M., Jukema, J.W., Harrington, R.A., Gray, J.V., Gorby, L.K., Goodman, S.G., Diaz, R., Bittner, V.A., Bhatt, D.L., Szarek, M., Schwartz, G.G., and ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators
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Erythrocytes ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Cholesterol, LDL ,major adverse cardiovascular events ,Treatment Outcome ,Risk Factors ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,acute coronary syndromes ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,red blood cell distribution width ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Alirocumab - Abstract
Elevated red blood cell distribution width (RDW) is associated with increased risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and death in patients with cardiovascular disease. The ODYSSEY OUT-COMES trial compared alirocumab with placebo in 18,924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and elevated atherogenic lipoproteins despite optimized statin treatment. This post hoc analysis determined whether RDW independently predicts risk of MACE and death in patients after recent ACS, whether RDW influences MACE reduction with alirocumab, and whether alirocumab treatment affects RDW. Associations of baseline RDW with risk of MACE and death were analyzed in the placebo group in adjusted proportional hazards models. Interactions of RDW and treatment on the risk of MACE and death were evaluated. An increasing quartile of RDW was associated with characteristics that predicted risk of MACE and death including age, hypertension, diabetes, atherosclerotic conditions and events, revascularizations, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein. After ad-justing for baseline characteristics associated with the risk of MACE or death, baseline RDW remained independently associated with the risk of MACE and death in the placebo group (hazard ratios [95% confidence intervals] 1.08 [1.02-1.15] and 1.13 [1.03-1.24] per 1% increase of RDW, respectively, both p < 0.001). There was no interaction of RDW and treatment on MACE or death, nor did alirocumab affect RDW. RDW was associated with an increased risk of MACE and death, independent of established risk factors.(c) 2022 National Lipid Association. Published by Elsevier Inc.This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ )
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- 2022
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7. An international multidisciplinary consensus statement on MAFLD and the risk of CVD
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Zhou, X.-D. Targher, G. Byrne, C.D. Somers, V. Kim, S.U. Chahal, C.A.A. Wong, V.W.-S. Cai, J. Shapiro, M.D. Eslam, M. Steg, P.G. Sung, K.-C. Misra, A. Li, J.-J. Brotons, C. Huang, Y. Papatheodoridis, G.V. Sun, A. Yilmaz, Y. Chan, W.K. Huang, H. Méndez-Sánchez, N. Alqahtani, S.A. Cortez-Pinto, H. Lip, G.Y.H. de Knegt, R.J. Ocama, P. Romero-Gomez, M. Fudim, M. Sebastiani, G. Son, J.W. Ryan, J.D. Ikonomidis, I. Treeprasertsuk, S. Pastori, D. Lupsor-Platon, M. Tilg, H. Ghazinyan, H. Boursier, J. Hamaguchi, M. Nguyen, M.H. Fan, J.-G. Goh, G.B.-B. Al Mahtab, M. Hamid, S. Perera, N. George, J. Zheng, M.-H. and Zhou, X.-D. Targher, G. Byrne, C.D. Somers, V. Kim, S.U. Chahal, C.A.A. Wong, V.W.-S. Cai, J. Shapiro, M.D. Eslam, M. Steg, P.G. Sung, K.-C. Misra, A. Li, J.-J. Brotons, C. Huang, Y. Papatheodoridis, G.V. Sun, A. Yilmaz, Y. Chan, W.K. Huang, H. Méndez-Sánchez, N. Alqahtani, S.A. Cortez-Pinto, H. Lip, G.Y.H. de Knegt, R.J. Ocama, P. Romero-Gomez, M. Fudim, M. Sebastiani, G. Son, J.W. Ryan, J.D. Ikonomidis, I. Treeprasertsuk, S. Pastori, D. Lupsor-Platon, M. Tilg, H. Ghazinyan, H. Boursier, J. Hamaguchi, M. Nguyen, M.H. Fan, J.-G. Goh, G.B.-B. Al Mahtab, M. Hamid, S. Perera, N. George, J. Zheng, M.-H.
- Abstract
Background: Fatty liver disease in the absence of excessive alcohol consumption is an increasingly common condition with a global prevalence of ~ 25–30% and is also associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD). Since systemic metabolic dysfunction underlies its pathogenesis, the term metabolic (dysfunction)-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) has been proposed for this condition. MAFLD is closely intertwined with obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and atherogenic dyslipidemia, which are established cardiovascular risk factors. Unlike CVD, which has received attention in the literature on fatty liver disease, the CVD risk associated with MAFLD is often underestimated, especially among Cardiologists. Methods and results: A multidisciplinary panel of fifty-two international experts comprising Hepatologists, Endocrinologists, Diabetologists, Cardiologists and Family Physicians from six continents (Asia, Europe, North America, South America, Africa and Oceania) participated in a formal Delphi survey and developed consensus statements on the association between MAFLD and the risk of CVD. Statements were developed on different aspects of CVD risk, ranging from epidemiology to mechanisms, screening, and management. Conculsions: The expert panel identified important clinical associations between MAFLD and the risk of CVD that could serve to increase awareness of the adverse metabolic and cardiovascular outcomes of MAFLD. Finally, the expert panel also suggests potential areas for future research. © 2023, Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver.
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- 2023
8. Multicenter randomized controlled trial on Duration of Therapy for Thrombosis in Children and Young Adults (the Kids‐DOTT trial): pilot/feasibility phase findings
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Goldenberg, N.A., Abshire, T., Blatchford, P.J., Fenton, L.Z., Halperin, J.L., Hiatt, W.R., Kessler, C.M., Kittelson, J.M., Manco‐Johnson, M.J., Spyropoulos, A.C., Steg, P.G., Stence, N.V., Turpie, A.G.G., Schulman, S., Punzalan, R., Wang, M., Jaffray, J., Young, G., Rajpurkar, M., Carpenter, S., Diab, Y., Verdun, N., Tarango, C., Acharya, S., Torres, M., Kucine, N., Mitchell, B., Shah, N., Thornburg, C., Takemoto, C., Kulkarni, R., O'Brien, S., Haley, K., Recht, M., Knoll, C., Geddis, A., Ahuja, S., Simpson, M., Srivaths, L., Journeycake, J., and Zia, A.
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- 2015
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9. Two-year Vascular Hospitalisation Rates and Associated Costs in Patients at Risk of Atherothrombosis in France and Germany: Highest Burden for Peripheral Arterial Disease
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Smolderen, K.G., Wang, K., de Pouvourville, G., Brüggenjürgen, B., Röther, J., Zeymer, U., Parhofer, K.G., Steg, P.G., Bhatt, D.L., and Magnuson, E.A.
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- 2012
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10. Achievement of ESC/EAS LDL-C treatment goals after an acute coronary syndrome with statin and alirocumab
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Landmesser, U., McGinniss, J., Steg, P.G., Bhatt, D.L., Bittner, V.A., Diaz, R., Dilic, M., Goodman, S.G., Jukema, J.W., Loy, M., Pecin, I., Pordy, R., Poulsen, S.H., Szarek, M., White, H.D., Schwartz, G.G., and ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators
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Epidemiology ,EZETIMIBE ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Guidelines ,Ezetimibe ,THERAPY ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,DENSITY-LIPOPROTEIN CHOLESTEROL ,LDL cholesterol ,Humans ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Acute coronary syndrome ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Goals ,Alirocumab - Abstract
Aims European guidelines set low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) treatment goals Methods and results The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial (NCT01663402) compared alirocumab with placebo in 18 924 patients with recent ACS and hyperlipidaemia despite high-intensity or maximum-tolerated statin therapy. This subanalysis comprised 17 589 patients with LDL-C ≥1.4 mmol/L at baseline who did not receive ezetimibe treatment. High-intensity statin treatment was used in 88.8%. Median (interquartile range) baseline LDL-C was 2.3 (1.9−2.7) mmol/L. With alirocumab, 94.6% of patients achieved LDL-C Conclusion Among patients with recent ACS and LDL-C ≥1.4 mmol/L despite optimized statin therapy, the addition of alirocumab allowed 94.6% to achieve the 2019 European guideline LDL-C goal
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- 2022
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11. Estimation of recurrent atherosclerotic cardiovascular event risk in patients with established cardiovascular disease: The updated SMART2 algorithm
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Hageman, S.H.J. McKay, A.J. Ueda, P. Gunn, L.H. Jernberg, T. Hagström, E. Bhatt, D.L. Steg, P.G. Läll, K. Mägi, R. Gynnild, M.N. Ellekjær, H. Saltvedt, I. Tuñón, J. Mahíllo, I. Aceña, Á. Kaminski, K. Chlabicz, M. Sawicka, E. Tillman, T. McEvoy, J.W. Di Angelantonio, E. Graham, I. De Bacquer, D. Ray, K.K. Dorresteijn, J.A.N. Visseren, F.L.J. Asselbergs, F.W. Nathoe, H.M. De Borst, G.J. Bots, M.L. Geerlings, M.I. Emmelot, M.H. De Jong, P.A. Leiner, T. Lely, A.T. Van Der Kaaij, N.P. Kappelle, L.J. Ruigrok, Y.M. Verhaar, M.C. Visseren, F.L.J. Westerink, J. Halle, M. Timmis, A.D. Lettino, M. Vardas, P.E. De Bacquer, D. Di Angelantonio, E. Visseren, F.L.J. Graham, I.M. the UCC-SMART Study Group the ESC Cardiovascular Risk Collaboration and Hageman, S.H.J. McKay, A.J. Ueda, P. Gunn, L.H. Jernberg, T. Hagström, E. Bhatt, D.L. Steg, P.G. Läll, K. Mägi, R. Gynnild, M.N. Ellekjær, H. Saltvedt, I. Tuñón, J. Mahíllo, I. Aceña, Á. Kaminski, K. Chlabicz, M. Sawicka, E. Tillman, T. McEvoy, J.W. Di Angelantonio, E. Graham, I. De Bacquer, D. Ray, K.K. Dorresteijn, J.A.N. Visseren, F.L.J. Asselbergs, F.W. Nathoe, H.M. De Borst, G.J. Bots, M.L. Geerlings, M.I. Emmelot, M.H. De Jong, P.A. Leiner, T. Lely, A.T. Van Der Kaaij, N.P. Kappelle, L.J. Ruigrok, Y.M. Verhaar, M.C. Visseren, F.L.J. Westerink, J. Halle, M. Timmis, A.D. Lettino, M. Vardas, P.E. De Bacquer, D. Di Angelantonio, E. Visseren, F.L.J. Graham, I.M. the UCC-SMART Study Group the ESC Cardiovascular Risk Collaboration
- Abstract
Aims: The 10-year risk of recurrent atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) events in patients with established ASCVD can be estimated with the Secondary Manifestations of ARTerial disease (SMART) risk score, and may help refine clinical management. To broaden generalizability across regions, we updated the existing tool (SMART2 risk score) and recalibrated it with regional incidence rates and assessed its performance in external populations. Methods and results: Individuals with coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral artery disease, or abdominal aortic aneurysms were included from the Utrecht Cardiovascular Cohort-SMART cohort [n = 8355; 1706 ASCVD events during a median follow-up of 8.2 years (interquartile range 4.2-12.5)] to derive a 10-year risk prediction model for recurrent ASCVD events (non-fatal myocardial infarction, non-fatal stroke, or cardiovascular mortality) using a Fine and Gray competing risk-adjusted model. The model was recalibrated to four regions across Europe, and to Asia (excluding Japan), Japan, Australia, North America, and Latin America using contemporary cohort data from each target region. External validation used data from seven cohorts [Clinical Practice Research Datalink, SWEDEHEART, the international REduction of Atherothrombosis for Continued Health (REACH) Registry, Estonian Biobank, Spanish Biomarkers in Acute Coronary Syndrome and Biomarkers in Acute Myocardial Infarction (BACS/BAMI), the Norwegian COgnitive Impairment After STroke, and Bialystok PLUS/Polaspire] and included 369 044 individuals with established ASCVD of whom 62 807 experienced an ASCVD event. C-statistics ranged from 0.605 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.547-0.664] in BACS/BAMI to 0.772 (95% CI 0.659-0.886) in REACH Europe high-risk region. The clinical utility of the model was demonstrated across a range of clinically relevant treatment thresholds for intensified treatment options. Conclusion: The SMART2 risk score provides an updated
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- 2022
12. Sacubitril/valsartan versus ramipril for patients with acute myocardial infarction: win-ratio analysis of the PARADISE-MI trial
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Berwanger, O. Pfeffer, M. Claggett, B. Jering, K.S. Maggioni, A.P. Steg, P.G. Mehran, R. Lewis, E.F. Zhou, Y. van der Meer, P. De Pasquale, C. Merkely, B. Filippatos, G. McMurray, J.J.V. Granger, C.B. Solomon, S.D. Braunwald, E. and Berwanger, O. Pfeffer, M. Claggett, B. Jering, K.S. Maggioni, A.P. Steg, P.G. Mehran, R. Lewis, E.F. Zhou, Y. van der Meer, P. De Pasquale, C. Merkely, B. Filippatos, G. McMurray, J.J.V. Granger, C.B. Solomon, S.D. Braunwald, E.
- Abstract
Aim: The win ratio can incorporate different types of outcomes and enhance statistical power, making it a useful method for analysing composite outcomes in cardiovascular trials. The application of this approach to the PARADISE-MI trial provides an additional perspective into understanding the effects of sacubitril/valsartan in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Methods and results: We conducted a post-hoc analysis of the PARADISE-MI trial, which randomly assigned patients with acute myocardial infarction complicated by a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, pulmonary congestion, or both to receive either sacubitril/valsartan (97 mg of sacubitril and 103 mg of valsartan twice daily) or ramipril (5 mg twice daily) in addition to guideline-recommended therapy. The principal composite outcome was analysed in the hierarchical order of death due to cardiovascular causes, first hospitalization for heart failure, and first outpatient episode of symptomatic heart failure. We included events confirmed by the clinical events classification (CEC) committee as well as events identified by investigators that did not meet study definitions. Results were analysed by the unmatched win-ratio method. A win ratio that exceeds 1.00 reflects a better outcome. A total of 5661 patients underwent randomization; 2830 were assigned to receive sacubitril/valsartan and 2831 to receive ramipril. The hierarchical analysis of the principal composite outcome demonstrated a larger number of wins (1 265 767 [15.7%]) than losses (1 079 502 [13.4%]) in the sacubitril/valsartan group (win ratio of 1.17, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.03–1.33; p = 0.015). Sensitivity analyses using alternative definitions of the composite outcome showed results similar to those of the principal analysis, except for analysis restricted to events that met CEC definitions (win ratio of 1.11, 95% CI 0.96–1.30; p = 0.16). Conclusion: In this post-hoc analysis of the PARADISE-MI trial using the win ratio and in
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- 2022
13. Apolipoprotein B, Residual Cardiovascular Risk After Acute Coronary Syndrome, and Effects of Alirocumab
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Hagström, E. Steg, P.G. Szarek, M. Bhatt, D.L. Bittner, V.A. Danchin, N. Diaz, R. Goodman, S.G. Harrington, R.A. Jukema, J.W. Liberopoulos, E. Marx, N. McGinniss, J. Manvelian, G. Pordy, R. Scemama, M. White, H.D. Zeiher, A.M. Schwartz, G.G. Bhatt, D.L. Bittner, V.A. Diaz, R. Goodman, S.G. Harrington, R.A. Jukema, J.W. Szarek, M. Zeiher, A.M. Tricoci, P. Roe, M.T. Mahaffey, K.W. Edelberg, J.M. Hanotin, C. Lecorps, G. Moryusef, A. Pordy, R. Sasiela, W.J. Tamby, J.-F. Diaz, R. Aylward, P.E. Drexel, H. Sinnaeve, P. Dilic, M. Lopes, R.D. Gotcheva, N.N. Goodman, S.G. Prieto, J.-C. Yong, H. López-Jaramillo, P. Pećin, I. Reiner, Z. Ostadal, P. Poulsen, S.H. Viigimaa, M. for the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators and Hagström, E. Steg, P.G. Szarek, M. Bhatt, D.L. Bittner, V.A. Danchin, N. Diaz, R. Goodman, S.G. Harrington, R.A. Jukema, J.W. Liberopoulos, E. Marx, N. McGinniss, J. Manvelian, G. Pordy, R. Scemama, M. White, H.D. Zeiher, A.M. Schwartz, G.G. Bhatt, D.L. Bittner, V.A. Diaz, R. Goodman, S.G. Harrington, R.A. Jukema, J.W. Szarek, M. Zeiher, A.M. Tricoci, P. Roe, M.T. Mahaffey, K.W. Edelberg, J.M. Hanotin, C. Lecorps, G. Moryusef, A. Pordy, R. Sasiela, W.J. Tamby, J.-F. Diaz, R. Aylward, P.E. Drexel, H. Sinnaeve, P. Dilic, M. Lopes, R.D. Gotcheva, N.N. Goodman, S.G. Prieto, J.-C. Yong, H. López-Jaramillo, P. Pećin, I. Reiner, Z. Ostadal, P. Poulsen, S.H. Viigimaa, M. for the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators
- Abstract
Background: Apolipoprotein B (apoB) provides an integrated measure of atherogenic risk. Whether apoB levels and apoB lowering hold incremental predictive information on residual risk after acute coronary syndrome beyond that provided by low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is uncertain. Methods: The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial (Evaluation of Cardiovascular Outcomes After an Acute Coronary Syndrome During Treatment With Alirocumab) compared the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 inhibitor alirocumab with placebo in 18 924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome and elevated atherogenic lipoproteins despite optimized statin therapy. Primary outcome was major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE; coronary heart disease death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, fatal/nonfatal ischemic stroke, hospitalization for unstable angina). Associations between baseline apoB or apoB at 4 months and MACE were assessed in adjusted Cox proportional hazards and propensity score-matched models. Results: Median follow-up was 2.8 years. In proportional hazards analysis in the placebo group, MACE incidence increased across increasing baseline apoB strata (3.2 [95% CI, 2.9-3.6], 4.0 [95% CI, 3.6-4.5], and 5.5 [95% CI, 5.0-6.1] events per 100 patient-years in strata <75, 75-<90, ≥90 mg/dL, respectively; Ptrend<0.0001) and after adjustment for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (Ptrend=0.035). Higher baseline apoB stratum was associated with greater relative (Ptrend<0.0001) and absolute reduction in MACE with alirocumab versus placebo. In the alirocumab group, the incidence of MACE after month 4 decreased monotonically across decreasing achieved apoB strata (4.26 [95% CI, 3.78-4.79], 3.09 [95% CI, 2.69-3.54], and 2.41 [95% CI, 2.11-2.76] events per 100 patient-years in strata ≥50, >35-<50, and ≤35 mg/dL, respectively). Compared with propensity score-matched patients from the placebo group, treatment hazard ratios for alirocumab also decreased
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- 2022
14. Ticagrelor Monotherapy or Dual Antiplatelet Therapy After Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation: Per-Protocol Analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS Trial
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Gragnano, F., Zwahlen, M., Vranckx, P., Heg, D., Schmidlin, K., Hamm, C., Steg, P.G., Gargiulo, G., McFadden, E.P., Onuma, Y., Chichareon, P., Benit, E., Möllmann, H., Janssens, L., Leonardi, S., Zurakowski, A., Arrivi, A., Geuns, R.J.M. van, Huber, K., Slagboom, T., Calabrò, P., Serruys, P.W., Jüni, P., Valgimigli, M., Windecker, S., Gragnano, F., Zwahlen, M., Vranckx, P., Heg, D., Schmidlin, K., Hamm, C., Steg, P.G., Gargiulo, G., McFadden, E.P., Onuma, Y., Chichareon, P., Benit, E., Möllmann, H., Janssens, L., Leonardi, S., Zurakowski, A., Arrivi, A., Geuns, R.J.M. van, Huber, K., Slagboom, T., Calabrò, P., Serruys, P.W., Jüni, P., Valgimigli, M., and Windecker, S.
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Contains fulltext : 252201.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Background In the GLOBAL LEADERS trial, ticagrelor monotherapy beyond 1 month compared with standard antiplatelet regimens after coronary stent implantation did not improve outcomes at intention-to-treat analysis. Considerable differences in treatment adherence between the experimental and control groups may have affected the intention-to-treat results. In this reanalysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial, we compared the experimental and control treatment strategies in a per-protocol analysis of patients who did not deviate from the study protocol. Methods and Results Baseline and postrandomization information were used to classify whether and when patients were deviating from the study protocol. With logistic regressions, we derived time-varying inverse probabilities of nondeviation from protocol to reconstruct the trial population without protocol deviation. The primary end point was a composite of all-cause mortality or nonfatal Q-wave myocardial infarction at 2 years. At 2-year follow-up, 1103 (13.8%) of 7980 patients in the experimental group and 785 (9.8%) of 7988 patients in the control group qualified as protocol deviators. At per-protocol analysis, the rate ratio for the primary end point was 0.88 (95% CI, 0.75-1.03; P=0.10) on the basis of 274 versus 325 events in the experimental versus control group. The rate ratio for the key safety end point of major bleeding was 1.00 (95% CI, 0.79-1.26; P=0.99). The per-protocol and intention-to-treat effect estimates were overall consistent. Conclusions Among patients who complied with the study protocol in the GLOBAL LEADERS trial, ticagrelor plus aspirin for 1 month followed by ticagrelor monotherapy was not superior to 1-year standard dual antiplatelet therapy followed by aspirin alone at 2 years after coronary stenting. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT01813435.
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- 2022
15. Apolipoprotein B, Residual Cardiovascular Risk After Acute Coronary Syndrome, and Effects of Alirocumab
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Hagström, E., Steg, P.G., Szarek, M., Bhatt, D.L., Bittner, V.A., Danchin, N., Diaz, R., Goodman, S.G., Harrington, R.A., Jukema, J.W., Liberopoulos, E., Marx, N., McGinniss, J., Manvelian, G., Pordy, R., Scemama, M., White, H.D., Suryapranata, H., Zeiher, A.M., Schwartz, G.G., Hagström, E., Steg, P.G., Szarek, M., Bhatt, D.L., Bittner, V.A., Danchin, N., Diaz, R., Goodman, S.G., Harrington, R.A., Jukema, J.W., Liberopoulos, E., Marx, N., McGinniss, J., Manvelian, G., Pordy, R., Scemama, M., White, H.D., Suryapranata, H., Zeiher, A.M., and Schwartz, G.G.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 283504.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), BACKGROUND: Apolipoprotein B (apoB) provides an integrated measure of atherogenic risk. Whether apoB levels and apoB lowering hold incremental predictive information on residual risk after acute coronary syndrome beyond that provided by low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is uncertain. METHODS: The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial (Evaluation of Cardiovascular Outcomes After an Acute Coronary Syndrome During Treatment With Alirocumab) compared the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 inhibitor alirocumab with placebo in 18 924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome and elevated atherogenic lipoproteins despite optimized statin therapy. Primary outcome was major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE; coronary heart disease death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, fatal/nonfatal ischemic stroke, hospitalization for unstable angina). Associations between baseline apoB or apoB at 4 months and MACE were assessed in adjusted Cox proportional hazards and propensity score-matched models. RESULTS: Median follow-up was 2.8 years. In proportional hazards analysis in the placebo group, MACE incidence increased across increasing baseline apoB strata (3.2 [95% CI, 2.9-3.6], 4.0 [95% CI, 3.6-4.5], and 5.5 [95% CI, 5.0-6.1] events per 100 patient-years in strata <75, 75-<90, ≥90 mg/dL, respectively; P(trend)<0.0001) and after adjustment for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (P(trend)=0.035). Higher baseline apoB stratum was associated with greater relative (P(trend)<0.0001) and absolute reduction in MACE with alirocumab versus placebo. In the alirocumab group, the incidence of MACE after month 4 decreased monotonically across decreasing achieved apoB strata (4.26 [95% CI, 3.78-4.79], 3.09 [95% CI, 2.69-3.54], and 2.41 [95% CI, 2.11-2.76] events per 100 patient-years in strata ≥50, >35-<50, and ≤35 mg/dL, respectively). Compared with propensity score-matched patients from the placebo group, treatment hazard ratios for alirocumab also decreased monotonically across achieved apoB s
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- 2022
16. Impact of preoperative maintenance or interruption of aspirin on thrombotic and bleeding events after elective non-cardiac surgery: the multicentre, randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled, STRATAGEM trial
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Mantz, J., Samama, C.M., Tubach, F., Devereaux, P.J., Collet, J.-P., Albaladejo, P., Cholley, B., Nizard, R., Barré, J., Piriou, V., Poirier, N., Mignon, A., Schlumberger, S., Longrois, D., Aubrun, F., Farèse, M.E., Ravaud, P., and Steg, P.G.
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- 2011
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17. Effects of early myocardial reperfusion and perfusion on myocardial necrosis/dysfunction and inflammation in patients with ST-segment and non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome : results from the PLATelet inhibition and patients Outcomes (PLATO) trial
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Batra, G., Renlund, H., Kunadian, V., James, S.K., Storey, R.F., Steg, P.G., Katus, H.A., Harrington, R.A., Gibson, C.M., Budaj, A., Siegbahn, A., and Wallentin, L.
- Abstract
Aims\ud \ud Restoration of myocardial blood flow and perfusion during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) measured using Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) flow grade (TFG) and perfusion grade (TMPG) is associated with improved outcomes in acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Associations between TFG/TMPG and changes in biomarkers reflecting myocardial damage/dysfunction and inflammation is unknown.\ud \ud \ud \ud Methods and results\ud \ud Among 2606 patients included, TFG was evaluated in 2198 and TMPG in 1874 with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) or non-ST-segment ACS (NSTE-ACS). Biomarkers reflecting myocardial necrosis [troponin T (TnT)], myocardial dysfunction [N-terminal prohormone brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP)], inflammation [interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP)], and oxidative stress/ageing/inflammation [growth differentiation factor-15 (GDF-15)] were measured at baseline, discharge, and 1- and 6-month post-randomization. Associations between TFG/TMPG and changes in biomarker levels were evaluated using the Mann–Whitney–Wilcoxon signed test. In total, 1423 (54.6%) patients had STEMI and 1183 (45.4%) NSTE-ACS. Complete reperfusion after PCI with TFG = 3 was achieved in 1110 (85.3%) with STEMI and in 793 (88.5%) with NSTE-ACS. Normal myocardial perfusion with TMPG = 3 was achieved in 475 (41.6%) with STEMI and in 396 (54.0%) with NSTE-ACS. Levels of TnT, NT-proBNP, IL-6, CRP, and GDF-15 were substantially lower at discharge in patients with complete vs. incomplete TFG and STEMI (P < 0.01). This pattern was not observed for patients with NSTE-ACS. Patients with normal vs. abnormal TMPG and NSTE-ACS had lower levels of NT-proBNP at discharge (P = 0.01).\ud \ud \ud \ud Conclusions\ud \ud Successful restoration of epicardial blood flow in STEMI was associated with less myocardial necrosis/dysfunction and inflammation. Attainment of normal myocardial perfusion was associated with less myocardial dysfunction in NSTE-ACS.
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- 2022
18. Alirocumab after acute coronary syndrome in patients with a history of heart failure
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White, H.D., Schwartz, G.G., Szarek, M., Bhatt, D.L., Bittner, V.A., Chiang, C.E., Diaz, R., Goodman, S.G., Jukema, J.W., Loy, M., Pagidipati, N., Pordy, R., Ristic, A.D., Zeiher, A.M., Wojdyla, D.M., Steg, P.G., and ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators
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Treatment Outcome ,Anticholesteremic Agents ,ODYSSEY OUTCOMES ,Humans ,Heart failure ,MACE ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Acute coronary syndromes ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Alirocumab - Abstract
Aims: Patients with heart failure (HF) have not been shown to benefit from statins. In a post hoc analysis, we evaluated outcomes in ODYSSEY OUTCOMES in patients with vs. without a history of HF randomized to the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitor alirocumab or placebo. Methods and results: Among 18 924 patients with recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS) receiving intensive or maximum-tolerated statin treatment, the primary outcome of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) was compared in patients with or without a history of HF. The pre-specified secondary outcome of hospitalization for HF was also analysed. Overall, 2815 (14.9%) patients had a history of HF. Alirocumab reduced low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and lipoprotein(a) similarly in patients with or without HF. Overall, alirocumab reduced MACE compared with placebo [hazard ratio (HR): 0.85; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.78-0.93; P = 0.0001]. This effect was observed among patients without a history of HF (HR: 0.78; 95% CI: 0.70-0.86; P < 0.0001), but not in those with a history of HF (HR: 1.17; 95% CI: 0.97-1.40; P = 0.10) (P-interaction = 0.0001). Alirocumab did not reduce hospitalization for HF, overall or in patients with or without prior HF. Conclusion: Alirocumab reduced MACE in patients without a history of HF but not in patients with a history of HF. Alirocumab did not reduce hospitalizations for HF in either group. Patients with a history of HF are a high-risk group that does not appear to benefit from PCSK9 inhibition after ACS. Key Question Patients with heart failure (HF) have not been shown to benefit from statins. In a post hoc analysis of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial in patients with recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS), we evaluated major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in patients with or without a history of HF assigned to treatment with the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitor alirocumab or placebo. Key Finding Alirocumab reduced low-density lipoprotein cholesterol similarly in patients with or without HF. However, alirocumab reduced MACE among patients without a history of HF, but not in those with a history of HF. Take Home Message The current hypothesis-generating analysis does not provide a basis to recommend PCSK9 inhibitors to patients with recent ACS and a history of HF. A prospective placebo-controlled evaluation of PCSK9 inhibition in this setting is warranted.
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- 2021
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19. The association of body mass index with long-term clinical outcomes after ticagrelor monotherapy following abbreviated dual antiplatelet therapy in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention : a prespecified sub-analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial
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Ono, M., Chichareon, P., Tomaniak, M., Kawashima, H., Takahashi, K., Kogame, N., Modolo, R., Hara, H., Gao, C., Wang, R., Walsh, S., Suryapranata, H., da Silva, P.C., Cotton, J., Koning, R., Akin, I., Rensing, B.J.W.M., Garg, S., Wykrzykowska, J.J., Piek, J.J., Jüni, P., Hamm, C., Steg, P.G., Valgimigli, M., Windecker, S., Storey, R.F., Onuma, Y., Vranckx, P., and Serruys, P.W.
- Abstract
Background\ud \ud The efficacy of antiplatelet therapies following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) may be affected by body mass index (BMI).\ud \ud \ud \ud Methods and results\ud \ud This is a prespecified subgroup analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial, a prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial in an all-comer population undergoing PCI, comparing the experimental strategy (23-month ticagrelor monotherapy following 1-month dual antiplatelet therapy [DAPT]) with a reference regimen (12-month aspirin monotherapy following 12-month DAPT). A total of 15,968 patients were stratified by baseline BMI with prespecified threshold of 27 kg/m2. Of those, 6973 (43.7%) patients with a BMI
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- 2020
20. Gut microbiota‐dependent trimethylamine N‐oxide and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with prior myocardial infarction: A nested case control study from the PEGASUS‐TIMI 54 trial
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Gencer, B., Li, X.S., Gurmu, Y., Bonaca, M.P., Morrow, D.A., Cohen, M., Bhatt, D.L., Steg, P.G., Storey, R.F., Johanson, P., Wang, Z., Hazen, S.L., and Sabatine, M.S.
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cardiovascular diseases - Abstract
Background\ud Trimethylamine N‐oxide (TMAO) may have prothrombotic properties. We examined the association of TMAO quartiles with major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and the effect of TMAO on the efficacy of ticagrelor.\ud \ud Methods and Results\ud PEGASUS‐TIMI 54 (Prevention of Cardiovascular Events in Patients With Prior Heart Attack Using Ticagrelor Compared to Placebo on a Background of Aspirin ‐ Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 54) randomized patients with prior myocardial infarction to ticagrelor or placebo (median follow‐up 33 months). Baseline plasma concentrations of TMAO were measured in a nested case‐control study of 597 cases with cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke (MACE) and 1206 controls matched for age, sex, and estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR]. Odds ratios (OR) were used for the association between TMAO quartiles and MACE, adjusting for baseline clinical characteristics (age, sex, eGFR, region, body mass index, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, smoking, peripheral artery disease, index event, aspirin dosage and treatment arm), and cardiovascular biomarkers (hs‐TnT [high‐sensitivity troponin T], hs‐CRP [high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein], NT‐proBNP [N‐terminal‐pro‐B‐type natriuretic peptide]). Higher TMAO quartiles were associated with risk of MACE (OR for quartile 4 versus quartile 1, 1.43, 95% CI, 1.06–1.93, P trend=0.015). The association was driven by cardiovascular death (OR 2.25, 95% CI, 1.28–3.96, P trend=0.003) and stroke (OR 2.68, 95% CI, 1.39–5.17, P trend
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- 2020
21. Cost-Effectiveness of Alirocumab in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes: The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Trial
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Bhatt, D.L., Briggs, A.H., Reed, S.D., Annemans, L., Szarek, M., Bittner, V.A., Diaz, R., Goodman, S.G., Harrington, R.A., Higuchi, K., Joulain, F., Jukema, J.W., Li, Q.H., Mahaffey, K.W., Sanchez, R.J., Roe, M.T., Lopes, R.D., White, H.D., Zeiher, A.M., Schwartz, G.G., Steg, P.G., and ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Investigators
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Hypercholesterolemia ,cholesterol ,alirocumab ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,economic analysis ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Humans ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,acute coronary syndromes ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,cost-effectiveness ,Aged - Abstract
BACKGROUND Cholesterol reduction with proprotein convertase subtitisin-kexin type 9 inhibitors reduces ischemic events; however, the cost-effectiveness in statin-treated patients with recent acute coronary syndrome remains uncertain.OBJECTIVES This study sought to determine whether further cholesterol reduction with atirocumab would be cost-effective in patients with a recent acute coronary syndrome on optimal statin therapy.METHODS A cost-effectiveness model leveraging patient-level data from ODYSSEY OUTCOMES (Evaluation of Cardiovascular Outcomes After an Acute Coronary Syndrome During Treatment With Atirocumab) was developed to estimate costs and outcomes over a lifetime horizon. Patients (n = 18,924) had a recent acute coronary syndrome and were on high-intensity or maximum-tolerated statin therapy, with a baseline tow-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level >= 70 mg/l, non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol >= 100 mg/dl, or apotipoprotein B >= 80 mg/l. Atirocumab 75 mg or placebo was administered subcutaneously every 2 weeks. Atirocumab was blindly titrated to 150 mg if LDL-C remained >= 50 mg/dl or switched to placebo if 2 consecutive LDL-C levels were = 100 mg/dl.RESULTS Across the overall population recruited to the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial, using an annual treatment cost of US$5,850, the mean overall incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was US$92,200 per QALY (base case). The cost was US$41,800 per QALY in patients with baseline LDL-C >= 100 mg/dl, whereas in those with LDL-C >= 100 mg/dl the cost per QALY was US$299,400. Among patients with LDL-C a100 mg/dl, incremental cost-effectiveness ratios remained below US$100,000 per QALY across a wide variety of sensitivity analyses.CONCLUSIONS In patients with a recent acute coronary syndrome on optimal statin therapy, atirocumab improves cardiovascular outcomes at costs considered intermediate value, with good value in patients with baseline LDL-C mg/dt but less economic value with LDL-C >= 100 mg/dl. (Evaluation of Cardiovascular Outcomes After an Acute Coronary Syndrome During Treatment With Atirocumab [ODYSSEY OUTCOMES]; NCT01663402) (J Am Colt Cardiol 2020;75:2297-308) (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier on behalf of the American College of Cardiology Foundation.
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- 2020
22. A tale of two countries: costs and financial incentives for provisional stenting during percutaneous coronary intervention in France and the United States
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Durand-Zaleski, I., Dupouy, P., Coste Carrié, D.P., Furber, A., Bastuji-Garin, S., Steg, P.G., Dubois-Randé, J.-L., Kern, M., and Lafont, A.
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- 2002
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23. Reduced gastric injury with a novel, liquid lipid-aspirin formulation: results from a pooled, patient level analysis of two randomized endoscopy studies In healthy volunteers
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Bhatt, D.L, primary, Scheiman, J, additional, Angiolillo, D.J, additional, Steg, P.G, additional, Dangas, G.D, additional, Fan, W, additional, Prats, J, additional, and Deliargyris, E.N, additional
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- 2020
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24. REDUCE-IT: outcomes by baseline statin type
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Bhatt, D, primary, Miller, M, additional, Steg, P.G, additional, Brinton, E.A, additional, Jacobson, T.A, additional, Ketchum, S.B, additional, Doyle, R.T, additional, Juliano, R.A, additional, Jiao, L, additional, Granowitz, C, additional, Tardif, J.-C, additional, and Ballantyne, C.M, additional
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- 2020
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25. Ticagrelor monotherapy beyond 1 month versus standard dual antiplatelet therapy after drug-eluting coronary stenting: a pre-specified per-protocol analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial
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Gragnano, F, primary, Zwahlen, M, additional, Vranckx, P, additional, Juni, P, additional, Heg, D, additional, Hamm, C, additional, Steg, P.G, additional, Hagenbuch, N, additional, Gargiulo, G, additional, Van Geuns, R.J, additional, Huber, K, additional, Van Amsterdam, R, additional, Serruys, P.W, additional, Valgimigli, M, additional, and Windecker, S, additional
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- 2020
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26. Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol <50 mg/dL is an appropriate target after acute coronary syndrome: propensity score-matched analysis of the ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial
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Schwartz, G.G, primary, Szarek, M, additional, Bhatt, D.L, additional, Bittner, V.A, additional, Diaz, R, additional, Goodman, S.G, additional, Harrington, R.A, additional, Jukema, J.W, additional, Kim, Y.U, additional, Li, Q.H, additional, Manvelian, G, additional, White, H.D, additional, Zeiher, A.M, additional, and Steg, P.G, additional
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- 2020
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27. Effect of alirocumab on incidence of atrial fibrillation after acute coronary syndromes: insights from ODYSSEY OUTCOMES
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Lopes, R, primary, Steg, P.G, additional, Bhatt, D.L, additional, Bittner, V.A, additional, Dauchy, A, additional, Diaz, R, additional, Goodman, S.G, additional, Harrington, R.A, additional, Jukema, J.W, additional, Pordy, R, additional, Sourdille, T, additional, Szarek, M, additional, White, H.D, additional, Zeiher, A.M, additional, and Schwartz, G.G, additional
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- 2020
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28. REDUCE-IT: accumulation of data across prespecified interim analyses to final results
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Olshansky, B, primary, Bhatt, D, additional, Miller, M, additional, Steg, P.G, additional, Brinton, E.A, additional, Jacobson, T.A, additional, Ketchum, S.B, additional, Doyle, R.T, additional, Juliano, R.A, additional, Jiao, L, additional, Granowitz, C, additional, Tardif, J.-C, additional, Mehta, C, additional, Ballantyne, C.M, additional, and Chung, M.K, additional
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- 2020
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29. CCS patients with polyvascular disease are a high risk but heterogenous subset of patients: insights from the CLARIFY registry
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Gautier, A, primary, Ducrocq, G, additional, Elbez, Y, additional, Ferrari, R, additional, Ford, I, additional, Fox, K.M, additional, Tardif, J.C, additional, Tendera, M, additional, and Steg, P.G, additional
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- 2020
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30. REDUCE-IT: total ischemic events reduced across the full range of baseline LDL cholesterol and other key subgroups
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Bhatt, D, primary, Miller, M, additional, Steg, P.G, additional, Brinton, E.A, additional, Jacobson, T.A, additional, Ketchum, S.B, additional, Doyle, R.T, additional, Juliano, R.A, additional, Jiao, L, additional, Granowitz, C, additional, Gregson, J, additional, Pocock, S.J, additional, Tardif, J.-C, additional, and Ballantyne, C.M, additional
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- 2020
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31. Sleep disordered breathing: prevalence and association with cardiovascular disease in the French general population
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Balagny, P, primary, Wiernik, E, additional, Matta, J, additional, Frija-Masson, J, additional, Vidal-Petiot, E, additional, Steg, P.G, additional, Ribet, C, additional, Goldberg, M, additional, D'Ortho, M.P, additional, and Zins, M, additional
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- 2020
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32. Prognosis in patients with prior myocardial infarction and PEGASUS-TIMI 54 criteria in the CLARIFY registry
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Biscaglia, S, primary, Campo, G, additional, Fox, K, additional, Tardif, J.C, additional, Tendera, M, additional, Greenlaw, N, additional, Ford, I, additional, Stanley, B, additional, Ferrari, R, additional, and Steg, P.G, additional
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- 2020
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33. Naxos study: risk of bleeding with oral anticoagulants in non-valvular atrial fibrillation patients in France
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Danchin, N, primary, Steg, P.G, additional, Hanon, O, additional, Mahe, I, additional, Falissard, B, additional, Belhassen, M, additional, Dalon, F, additional, Gollety, S, additional, Cotte, F.E, additional, and Van-Ganse, E, additional
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- 2020
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34. Meeting Report: ESC Forum on Drug Eluting Stents European Heart House, Nice, 27–28 September 2007
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Daemen, Joost, Simoons, Maarten L., Wijns, William, Bagust, Adrian, Bos, Gert, Bowen, James M., Braunwald, Eugene, Camenzind, Edoardo, Chevalier, Bernard, DiMario, Carlo, Fajadet, Jean, Gitt, Anselm, Guagliumi, Giulio, Hillege, Hans L., James, Stefan, Jüni, Peter, Kastrati, Adnan, Kloth, Sabine, Kristensen, Steen D., Krucoff, Mitchell, Legrand, Victor, Pfisterer, Matthias, Rothman, Martin, Serruys, Patrick W., Silber, Sigmund, Steg, Philippe G., Tariah, Ibrahim, Wallentin, Lars, Windecker, Stephan W., Aimonetti, A., Allocco, D., Baczynska, A., Bagust, A., Berenger, M., Bos, G., Boam, A., Bowen, J.M., Braunwald, E., Calle, J.P., Camenzind, E., Campo, G., Carlier, S., Chevalier, B., Daemen, J., de Schepper, J., Di Bisceglie, G., DiMario, C., Dobbels, H., Fajadet, J., Farb, A., Ghislain, J.C., Gitt, A., Guagliumi, G., Hellbardt, S., Hillege, H.L., ten Hoedt, R., Isaia, C., James, S., de Jong, P., Jüni, P., Kastrati, A., Klasen, E., Kloth, S., Kristensen, S.D., Krucoff, M., Legrand, V., Lekehal, M., LeNarz, L., Ni Mhullain, F., Nagai, H., Patteet, A., Paunovic, D., Pfisterer, M., Potgieter, A., Purdy, I., Raveau-Landon, C., Rothman, M., Serruys, P.W., Silber, S., Simoons, M.L., Steg, P.G., Tariah, I., Ternstrom, S., Van Wuytswinkel, J., Waliszewski, M., Wallentin, L., Wijns, W., and Windecker, S.W.
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- 2009
35. REPLY: alirocumab in polyvascular atherosclerotic disease
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Zijlstra, L.E., Schwartz, G.G., Steg, P.G., and Jukema, J.W.
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- 2020
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36. Bleeding Risk, Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Cessation, and Adverse Events after Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: The PARIS Registry
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Sorrentino, S. Sartori, S. Baber, U. Claessen, B.E. Giustino, G. Chandrasekhar, J. Chandiramani, R. Cohen, D.J. Henry, T.D. Guedeney, P. Ariti, C. Dangas, G. Gibson, C.M. Krucoff, M.W. Moliterno, D.J. Colombo, A. Vogel, B. Chieffo, A. Kini, A.S. Witzenbichler, B. Weisz, G. Steg, P.G. Pocock, S. Urban, P. Mehran, R.
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animal structures - Abstract
Background: Whether the underlying risk of bleeding influences the associations between patterns of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) cessation and adverse events after percutaneous coronary intervention is unknown. Methods: Patients enrolled in the prospective, international, multicenter PARIS registry (Patterns of Non-Adherence to Anti-Platelet Regimens in Stented Patients) were categorized according to their risk of bleeding using the PARIS bleeding risk score. We evaluated the incidence, patterns, and association between modes of DAPT cessation and outcomes across bleeding risk groups. Modes of DAPT cessations were defined as physician-guided DAPT discontinuation, brief interruption (
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- 2020
37. Interleukin‐18 in patients with acute coronary syndromes
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Åkerblom, A., James, S.K., Lakic, T.G., Becker, R.C., Cannon, C.P., Steg, P.G., Himmelmann, A., Katus, H.A., Storey, R.F., Wallentin, L., Weaver, W.D., and Siegbahn, A.
- Abstract
Background\ud \ud We aimed to assess associations between circulating IL‐18 concentrations and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS).\ud \ud \ud \ud Hypothesis and Methods\ud \ud Plasma IL‐18 concentrations were measured at admission, discharge, 1 month, and 6 months in patients with ACS in the PLATelet inhibition and patient Outcomes (PLATO) trial. Associations with outcomes were evaluated with Cox regression models on the composite of CV death, spontaneous myocardial infarction (sMI), or stroke; and on CV death or sMI separately, including adjustment for clinical risk factors and biomarkers (cTnT‐hs, NT‐proBNP, cystatin C, CRP‐hs, and GDF‐15).\ud \ud \ud \ud Results\ud \ud Median IL‐18 concentrations at baseline, discharge, 1 month, and 6 months were 237, 283, 305, and 320 ng/L (n = 16 636). Male sex, obesity, diabetes, and plasma levels of cystatin C, GDF‐15, and CRP‐hs were independently associated with higher IL‐18 levels. Higher baseline IL‐18 levels were associated with the composite endpoint and with CV death (hazard ratio [HR] 1.05, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.02‐1.07 and HR 1.10, 95% CI 1.06‐1.14, respectively, per 25% increase of IL‐18 levels). Associations remained significant after adjustment for clinical variables but became non‐significant after adjustment for all biomarkers (HR 1.01, 95% CI 0.98‐1.04 and HR 1.04, 95% CI 1.00‐1.08, respectively). There were no associations with sMI.\ud \ud \ud \ud Conclusions\ud \ud In ACS patients, IL‐18 concentrations increased after the acute event and remained increased for 6 months. Baseline IL‐18 levels were significantly associated with CV mortality, independent of clinical characteristics and indicators of renal/cardiac dysfunction but this association was attenuated after adjustment for multiple biomarkers.
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- 2019
38. Relationships of treatment delays and mortality in patients undergoing fibrinolysis and primary percutaneous coronary intervention: The Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events
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Nallamothu, B.K., Fox, K.A.A., Kennelly, B.M., Van de Werf, F., Gore, J.M., Steg, P.G., Granger, C.B., Dabbous, O.H., Kline-Rogers, E., and Eagle, K.A.
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Heart attack -- Care and treatment ,Heart attack -- Patient outcomes ,Heart attack -- Research ,Thrombolytic therapy -- Patient outcomes ,Transluminal angioplasty -- Patient outcomes ,Mortality -- United States ,Mortality -- Reports ,Health - Published
- 2007
39. Intervention in acute coronary syndromes: do patients undergo intervention on the basis of their risk characteristics? The Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE)
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Fox, K.A.A., Anderson, F.A., Jr., Dabbous, O.H., Steg, P.G., Lopez-Sendon, J., Van de Werf, F., Budaj, A., Gurfinkel, E.P., Goodman, S.G., and Brieger, D.
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Coronary heart disease -- Risk factors ,Coronary heart disease -- Patient outcomes ,Coronary heart disease -- Research ,Angiography -- Patient outcomes ,Angiography -- Research ,Health - Published
- 2007
40. Impact of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and dyspnoea on clinical outcomes in ticagrelor treated patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention in the randomized GLOBAL LEADERS trial
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Tomaniak, M., Chichareon, P., Takahashi, K., Kogame, N., Modolo, R., Chang, C.C., Spitzer, E., Neumann, F.J., Plante, S., Antolin, R. Hernández, Jambrik, Z., Gelev, V., Brunel, P., Konteva, M., Beygui, F., Morelle, J.F., Filipiak, K.J., Geuns, R.J.M. van, Soliman, O., Tijssen, J., Rademaker-Havinga, T., Storey, R.F., Hamm, C., Steg, P.G., Windecker, S., Onuma, Y., Valgimigli, M., Serruys, P.W., Tomaniak, M., Chichareon, P., Takahashi, K., Kogame, N., Modolo, R., Chang, C.C., Spitzer, E., Neumann, F.J., Plante, S., Antolin, R. Hernández, Jambrik, Z., Gelev, V., Brunel, P., Konteva, M., Beygui, F., Morelle, J.F., Filipiak, K.J., Geuns, R.J.M. van, Soliman, O., Tijssen, J., Rademaker-Havinga, T., Storey, R.F., Hamm, C., Steg, P.G., Windecker, S., Onuma, Y., Valgimigli, M., and Serruys, P.W.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 225457.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access), AIMS: To evaluate long-term safety and efficacy of ticagrelor monotherapy in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs) in relation to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) at baseline and the occurrence of dyspnoea reported as adverse event (AE) that may lead to treatment non-adherence. METHODS AND RESULTS: This is a non-prespecified, post hoc analysis of the randomized GLOBAL LEADERS trial (n = 15 991), comparing the experimental strategy of 23-month ticagrelor monotherapy following 1-month dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after PCI with the reference strategy of 12-month DAPT followed by 12-month aspirin monotherapy. Impact of COPD and dyspnoea AE (as a time-dependent covariate) on clinical outcomes was evaluated up to 2 years. The primary endpoint was a 2-year all-cause mortality or non-fatal, centrally adjudicated, new Q-wave myocardial infarction. The presence of COPD (n = 832) was the strongest clinical predictor of 2-year all-cause mortality after PCI [hazard ratio (HR) 2.84; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.21-3.66; P adjusted = 0.001] in this cohort (n = 15 991). No differential treatment effects on 2-year clinical outcomes were found in patients with and without COPD (primary endpoint: HR 0.88; 95% CI 0.58-1.35; P = 0.562; P int = 0.952). Overall, at 2 years dyspnoea was reported as an AE in 2101 patients, more frequently among COPD patients, irrespective of treatment allocation (27.2% in experimental arm vs. 14.5% in reference arm, P = 0.001). Its occurrence was not associated with a higher rate of the primary endpoint (P adjusted = 0.640) in the experimental vs. the reference arm. CONCLUSION: In this exploratory analysis, COPD negatively impacted long-term prognosis after PCI. Despite higher incidence of dyspnoea in the experimental arm, in particular among COPD patients, the safety of the experimental treatment strategy appeared not to be affected. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION UNIQUE IDENTIFIER: NCT01813435.
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- 2020
41. Association of Pulse Pressure With Clinical Outcomes in Patients Under Different Antiplatelet Strategies After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: Analysis of GLOBAL LEADERS
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de Faria, A.P. (Ana Paula), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Chang, C.-C. (Chun-Chin), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Rademaker-Havinga, T.A.M. (Tessa), Wykrzykowska, J.J. (Joanna), Winter, R.J. (Robbert) de, Ferreira, R.C. (Rui C.), Sousa, A. (Amanda), Lemos, F.B.C. (Francine), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Hamm, C. (Christian), Juni, P. (Peter), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), de Faria, A.P. (Ana Paula), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Chang, C.-C. (Chun-Chin), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Rademaker-Havinga, T.A.M. (Tessa), Wykrzykowska, J.J. (Joanna), Winter, R.J. (Robbert) de, Ferreira, R.C. (Rui C.), Sousa, A. (Amanda), Lemos, F.B.C. (Francine), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Hamm, C. (Christian), Juni, P. (Peter), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), and Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
- Abstract
Background: We evaluated the association of pulse pressure (PP) and different antiplatelet regimes with clinical and safety outcomes in an all-comers percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) population. Methods: In this analysis of GLOBAL LEADERS (n = 15,936) we compared the experimental therapy of 23 months of ticagrelor after 1 month of dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) versus standard DAPT for 12 months followed by aspirin monotherapy in subjects who underwent PCI and were divided into 2 groups according to the median PP (60 mm Hg). The primary end point (all-cause death or new Q-wave myocardial infarction) and the composite end points: patient-oriented composite end points (POCE), Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) 3 or 5, and net adverse clinical events (NACE) were evaluated. Results: At 2 years, subjects in the high-PP group (n = 7971) had similar rates of the primary end point (4.3% vs 3.9%; P = 0.058), POCE (14.9% vs 12.7%; P = 0.051), and BARC 3 or 5 (2.5% vs 1.7%; P = 0.355) and higher rates of NACE (16.4% vs 13.7%; P = 0.037) compared with the low-PP group (n = 7965). Among patients with PP < 60 mm Hg, the primary end point (3.4% vs 4.4%, adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.77, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.61-0.96), POCE (11.8% vs 13.5%, aHR 0.86, 95% CI 0.76-0.98), NACE (12.8% vs 14.7%, aHR 0.85, 95% CI 0.76-0.96), and BARC 3 or 5 (1.4% vs 2.1%, aHR 0.69, 95% CI 0.49-0.97) were lower with ticagrelor monotherapy compared with DAPT. The only significant interaction was for BARC 3 or 5 (P = 0.008). Conclusions: After contemporary PCI, subjects with high PP levels experienced high rates of NACE at 2 years. In those with low PP, ticagrelor monotherapy led to a lower risk of bleeding events compared with standard DAPT.
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- 2020
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42. Impact of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and dyspnoea on clinical outcomes in ticagrelor treated patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention in the randomized GLOBAL LEADERS trial
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Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Chang, C.C. (Chun Chin), Spitzer, E. (Ernest), Neumann, F.J., Plante, S. (Sylvain), Hernandez-Antolin, R. (Rosana), Jambrik, Z. (Zoltan), Gelev, V. (Valeri), Brunel, P. (Philippe), Konteva, M. (Mariana), Beygui, F. (Farzin), Morelle, J.-F. (Jean-Francois), Filipiak, K.J. (Krzysztof J.), Geuns, R.J.M. (Robert Jan) van, Soliman, O.I.I. (Osama Ibrahim Ibrahim), Tijssen, J.G.P. (Jan), Rademaker-Havinga, T.A.M. (Tessa), Storey, D. (David), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Chang, C.C. (Chun Chin), Spitzer, E. (Ernest), Neumann, F.J., Plante, S. (Sylvain), Hernandez-Antolin, R. (Rosana), Jambrik, Z. (Zoltan), Gelev, V. (Valeri), Brunel, P. (Philippe), Konteva, M. (Mariana), Beygui, F. (Farzin), Morelle, J.-F. (Jean-Francois), Filipiak, K.J. (Krzysztof J.), Geuns, R.J.M. (Robert Jan) van, Soliman, O.I.I. (Osama Ibrahim Ibrahim), Tijssen, J.G.P. (Jan), Rademaker-Havinga, T.A.M. (Tessa), Storey, D. (David), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), and Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
- Abstract
AIMS: To evaluate long-term safety and efficacy of ticagrelor monotherapy in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs) in relation to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) at baseline and the occurrence of dyspnoea reported as adverse event (AE) that may lead to treatment non-adherence. METHODS AND RESULTS: This is a non-prespecified, post hoc analysis of the randomized GLOBAL LEADERS trial (n = 15 991), comparing the experimental strategy of 23-month ticagrelor monotherapy following 1-mon
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- 2020
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43. Ticagrelor monotherapy in patients with concomitant diabetes mellitus and chronic kidney disease: a post hoc analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial
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Gao, C. (Cheng), Tomaniak, M., Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kawashima, H., Wang, R.T., Hara, H. (Hidetaka), Ono, M, Montalescot, G., Garg, S.A. (Scot), Haude, M. (Michael), Slagboom, T. (Ton), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), van Geuns, R.J., Hamm, C.W. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Angiolillo, D.J. (Dominick), Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), Gao, C. (Cheng), Tomaniak, M., Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kawashima, H., Wang, R.T., Hara, H. (Hidetaka), Ono, M, Montalescot, G., Garg, S.A. (Scot), Haude, M. (Michael), Slagboom, T. (Ton), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), van Geuns, R.J., Hamm, C.W. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Angiolillo, D.J. (Dominick), and Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
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- 2020
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44. Influence of Bleeding Risk on Outcomes of Radial and Femoral Access for Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: An Analysis From the GLOBAL LEADERS Trial
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Gao, C. (Chao), Buszman, P.P. (Piotr), Buszman, P.E. (Pawel), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kawashima, H. (Hideyuki), Wang, R. (Rutao), Chang, C.C. (Chun Chin), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Ono, M. (Masafumi), Hara, H. (Hironori), Slagboom, T. (Ton), Aminian, A. (Adel), Naber, C.K. (Christoph), Carrié, D. (Didier), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Geuns, R.J.M. (Robert Jan) van, Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), Zurakowski, A. (Aleksander), Gao, C. (Chao), Buszman, P.P. (Piotr), Buszman, P.E. (Pawel), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kawashima, H. (Hideyuki), Wang, R. (Rutao), Chang, C.C. (Chun Chin), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Ono, M. (Masafumi), Hara, H. (Hironori), Slagboom, T. (Ton), Aminian, A. (Adel), Naber, C.K. (Christoph), Carrié, D. (Didier), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Geuns, R.J.M. (Robert Jan) van, Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), and Zurakowski, A. (Aleksander)
- Abstract
Background: Radial artery access has been shown to reduce mortality and bleeding events, especially in patients with acute coronary syndromes. Despite this, interventional cardiologists experienced in femoral artery access still prefer that route for percutaneous coronary intervention. Little is known regarding the merits of each vascular access in patients stratified by their risk of bleeding. Methods: Patients from the Global Leaders trial were dichotomized into low or high risk of bleeding by the median of the PRECISE-DAPT score. Clinical outcomes were compared at 30 days. Results: In the overall population, there were no statistical differences between radial and femoral access in the rate of the primary end point, a composite of all-cause mortality, or new Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI) (hazard ratio [HR] 0.70, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.42-1.15). Radial access was associated with a significantly lower rate of the secondary safety end point, Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) 3 or 5 bleeding (HR 0.55, 95% CI 0.36-0.84). Compared by bleeding risk strata, in the high bleeding score population, the primary (HR 0.47, 95% CI 0.26-0.85; P = 0.012; Pinteraction = 0.019) and secondary safety (HR 0.57, 95% CI 0.35-0.95; P = 0.030; Pinteraction = 0.631) end points favoured radial access. In the low bleeding score population, however, the differences in the primary and secondary safety end points between radial and femoral artery access were no longer statistically significant. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the outcomes of mortality or new Q-wave MI and BARC 3 or 5 bleeding favour radial access in patients with a high, but not those with a low, risk of bleeding. Because this, Contexte : Il a et e d emontr e que l ’accès par l’artère radiale reduit la mortalite et les h emorragies, en particulier chez les patients presentant un syndrome coronarien aigu. Malgr e cela, les cardiologues interventionnels qui ont acquis de l’experience en matière d ’accès par l’artère femorale pr efèrent encore utiliser cette voie lorsqu ’ils doivent pratiquer une intervention coronarienne percutanee. On connaît mal l’interêt de chacune de ces techniques d ’accès vasculaire au regard du risque d’hemorragie. Methodologie : Les patients de l’essai GLOBAL LEADERS ont et e repartis en deux groupes, selon qu ’ils presentaient un risque d’hemorragie faible ou elev e d ’après le score PRECISE-DAPT median, puis les resultats cliniques ont et e compar es à 30 jours. Resultats : Dans l’ensemble de la population, aucune difference sta- tistiquement significative n’a et e observ ee entre l ’accès radial et l’accès femoral quant au critère d ’evaluation principal, compos e de la mortalite toutes causes confondues et d ’un nouvel infarctus du myocarde (IM) avec onde Q (rapport des risques instantanes [RRI] de 0,70; intervalle de confiance [IC] à 95 % : 0,42-1,15). L’accès radial a et e associe à un taux signi ficativement plus faible de survenue du critère secondaire d’evaluation de l ’innocuite, c ’est-à-dire une hemorragie de type 3 ou 5 selon la classification du BARC (Bleeding Academic Research Consortium) (RRI de 0,55; IC à 95 % : 0,36-0,84). Lorsqu’on compare les sujets en fonction du risque d’hemorragie, les critères d’evaluation de l ’innocuite principal (RRI de 0,47; IC à 95 % : 0,26- 0,85; p ¼ 0,012; pinteraction ¼ 0,019) et secondaire (RRI de 0,57; IC à 95 % : 0,35-0,95; p ¼ 0,030; pinteraction ¼ 0,631) sont favorables à l’accès radial au sein de la population presentant un risque d ’hemor- ragie elev e. Dans la population pr esentant un risque d ’hemorragie faible, les differences entre l ’accès radial et l’accès femoral quant aux critères d’evaluation de l ’inn
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- 2020
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45. Usefulness of the updated logistic clinical SYNTAX score after percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with prior coronary artery bypass graft surgery: Insights from the GLOBAL LEADERS trial
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Hara, H. (Hironori), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Ono, M. (Masafumi), Kawashima, H. (Hideyuki), Gao, C. (Chao), Wang, R. (Rutao), Valkov, V.D. (Veselin D.), vom Dahl, J. (Jürgen), Steinwender, C. (Clemens), Geisler, T. (Tobias), Lemos Neto, P.A. (Pedro Alves), Macaya Miguel, C. (Carlos), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Jüni, P. (Peter), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Farooq, V. (Vasim), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), Hara, H. (Hironori), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Ono, M. (Masafumi), Kawashima, H. (Hideyuki), Gao, C. (Chao), Wang, R. (Rutao), Valkov, V.D. (Veselin D.), vom Dahl, J. (Jürgen), Steinwender, C. (Clemens), Geisler, T. (Tobias), Lemos Neto, P.A. (Pedro Alves), Macaya Miguel, C. (Carlos), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Jüni, P. (Peter), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Farooq, V. (Vasim), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), and Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
- Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to investigate the prognostic utility of the anatomical CABG SYNTAX and logistic clinical SYNTAX scores for mortality after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafts (CABG). Background: The anatomical SYNTAX score evaluated the anatomical complexity of coronary artery disease and helped predict the prognosis of patients undergoing PCI. The anatomical CABG SYNTAX score was derived from the anatomical SYNTAX score in patients with prior CABG, whilst the logistic clinical SYNTAX score was developed by incorporating clinical factors into the anatomical SYNTAX score. Methods: We calculated the anatomical CABG SYNTAX score and logistic clinical SYNTAX score in 205 patients in the GLOBAL LEADERS trial. The predictive abilities of these scores for 2-year all-cause mortality were evaluated. Results: Using the median scores as categorical thresholds between low and high score groups, the logistic clinical SYNTAX score was able to discriminate the risk of 2-year mortality, unlike the anatomical CABG SYNTAX score. The logistic clinical SYNTAX was significantly better at predicting 2-year mortality, compared to the anatomical CABG SYNTAX score, as evidenced by AUC values in receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis (0.806 vs. 0.582, p <.001) and integrated discrimination improvement (0.121, p <.001). Conclusions: The logistic clinical SYNTAX score was superior to the anatomical CABG SYNTAX score in predicting 2-year mortality.
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- 2020
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46. The association of body mass index with long-term clinical outcomes after ticagrelor monotherapy following abbreviated dual antiplatelet therapy in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention: a prespecified sub-analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS Trial
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Ono, M. (Masafumi), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Kawashima, H. (Hideyuki), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Hara, H. (Hironori), Gao, C. (Chao), Wang, R. (Rutao), Walsh, S. (Simon), Suryapranata, H. (Harry), da Silva, P.C. (Pedro Canas), Cotton, J.M., Koning, R. (René), Akin, I. (Ibrahim), Rensing, B.J.W.M. (Benno), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Wykrzykowska, J.J. (Joanna), Piek, J.J. (Jan), Jüni, P. (Peter), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Storey, D. (David), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick), Ono, M. (Masafumi), Chichareon, P. (Ply), Tomaniak, M. (Mariusz), Kawashima, H. (Hideyuki), Takahashi, K. (Kuniaki), Kogame, N. (Norihiro), Modolo, R. (Rodrigo), Hara, H. (Hironori), Gao, C. (Chao), Wang, R. (Rutao), Walsh, S. (Simon), Suryapranata, H. (Harry), da Silva, P.C. (Pedro Canas), Cotton, J.M., Koning, R. (René), Akin, I. (Ibrahim), Rensing, B.J.W.M. (Benno), Garg, S.A. (Scot), Wykrzykowska, J.J. (Joanna), Piek, J.J. (Jan), Jüni, P. (Peter), Hamm, C. (Christian), Steg, P.G. (Philippe Gabriel), Valgimigli, M. (Marco), Windecker, S.W. (Stephan), Storey, D. (David), Onuma, Y. (Yoshinobu), Vranckx, P. (Pascal), and Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
- Abstract
Background: The efficacy of antiplatelet therapies following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) may be affected by body mass index (BMI). Methods and results: This is a prespecified subgroup analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial, a prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial in an all-comer population undergoing PCI, comparing the experimental strategy (23-month ticagrelor monotherapy following 1-month dual antiplatelet therapy [DAPT]) with a reference regimen (12-month aspirin monotherapy following 12-month DAPT). A total of 15,968 patients were stratified by baseline BMI with prespecified threshold of 27 kg/m2. Of those, 6973 (43.7%) patients with a BMI < 27 kg/m2 had a higher risk of all-cause mortality at 2 years than those with BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2 (adjusted HR 1.24, 95% CI 1.02–1.49). At 2 years, the rates of the primary endpoint (all-cause mortality or new Q-wave myocardial infarction) were similar between treatment strategies in either BMI group (pinteraction = 0.51). In acute coronary syndrome, however, the experimental strategy was associated with significant reduction of the primary endpoint compared to the reference strategy in patients with BMI < 27 kg/m2 (HR 0.69, 95% CI 0.51–0.94), but not in the ones with BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2 (pinteraction = 0.047). In chronic coronary syndrome, there was no between-group difference in the efficacy and safety of the two antiplatelet strategies. This is a prespecified subgroup analysis of the GLOBAL LEADERS trial, a prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial in an all-comer population undergoing PCI, comparing the experimental strategy (23-month ticagrelor monotherapy following 1-month dual antiplatelet therapy [DAPT]) with a reference regimen (12-month aspirin monotherapy following 12-month DAPT). A total of 15,968 patients were stratified by baseline BMI with prespecified threshold of 27 kg/m2. Of those, 6973 (43.7%) patients with a BMI < 27 kg/m2 had a higher risk of all-cause
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- 2020
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47. Bypassing the emergency room reduces delays and mortality in ST elevation myocardial infarction: the USIC 2000 registry
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Steg, P.G., Cambou, J.-P., Goldstein, P., Durand, E., Sauval, P., Kadri, Z., Blanchard, D., Lablanche, J.-M., Gueret, P., Cottin, Y., Juliard, J.-M., Hanania, G., Vaur, L., and Danchin, N.
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Heart attack -- Patient outcomes ,Heart attack -- Research ,Emergency medical services -- Research ,Hospitals -- Admission and discharge ,Hospitals -- Research ,Health - Published
- 2006
48. Impact of chronic oral anticoagulation on management and outcomes of patients with acute myocardial infarction: data from the RICO survey
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Oudot, A., Steg, P.G., Danchin, N., Dentan, G., Zeller, M., Sicard, P., Buffet, P., Laurent, Y., Janin-Manificat, L., L'Huillier, I., Beer, J.C., Makki, H., Morel, P., and Cottin, Y.
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Heart attack -- Care and treatment ,Heart attack -- Patient outcomes ,Heart attack -- Research ,Anticoagulants (Medicine) -- Dosage and administration ,Anticoagulants (Medicine) -- Influence ,Anticoagulants (Medicine) -- Research ,Health - Published
- 2006
49. Impact of availability and use of coronary interventions on the prescription of aspirin and lipid lowering treatment after acute coronary syndromes. (Cardiovascular Medicine)
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Steg, P.G., Iung, B., Feldman, L.J., Cokkinos, D., Deckers, J., Fox, K.A.A., Keil, U., and Maggioni, A.P.
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Drug therapy ,Health aspects ,Aspirin -- Health aspects ,Coronary heart disease -- Drug therapy ,Anticholesteremic agents -- Health aspects - Abstract
Background: It has been suggested that patients undergoing acute intervention for coronary syndromes may not receive adequate secondary prevention. Objective: To analyse the impact of availability and use of coronary [...]
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- 2002
50. Comparaison de la sécurité et de l’efficacité en vraie vie des anticoagulants chez les patients présentant une fibrillation auriculaire non valvulaire : l’étude NAXOS
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Van Ganse, E., primary, Danchin, N., additional, Mahé, I., additional, Hanon, O., additional, Jacoud, F., additional, Nolin, M., additional, Dalon, F., additional, Lefevre, C., additional, Cotte, F.-E., additional, Gollety, S., additional, Falissard, B., additional, Belhassen, M., additional, and Steg, P.G., additional
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- 2020
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