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APpropriAteness of percutaneous Coronary interventions in patients with ischaemic HEart disease in Italy: the APACHE pilot study

Authors :
Maddalena Lettino
Marianna Adamo
Giuseppe Tarantini
Andrea Pavei
Marta Brancati
Florinda Maiorana
Gabriele Crimi
Diego Rizzotti
Marco Zuccari
Giampaolo Pasquetto
Luca Bettari
Ferdinando Varbella
Stefano De Servi
Simone Tresoldi
Carlo Sponzilli
Leonardo De Luca
Luigi Pedon
Daniela Trabattoni
Marcello Marino
Giuseppe Tarelli
Mario Bollati
Paolo Sganzerla
Paola Camisasca
Arnaldo Poli
Giuseppe Musumeci
Corrado Lettieri
Panciroli C
Sergio Ghiringhelli
Luciano Bassan
Sergio Leonardi
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
BMJ, 2017.

Abstract

ObjectivesTo first explore in Italy appropriateness of indication, adherence to guideline recommendations and mode of selection for coronary revascularisation.DesignRetrospective, pilot study.Setting22 percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)-performing hospitals (20 patients per site), 13 (59%) with on-site cardiac surgery.Participants440 patients who received PCI for stable coronary artery disease (CAD) or non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome were independently selected in a 4:1 ratio with half diabetics.Primary and secondary outcome measuresProportion of patients who received appropriate PCI using validated appropriate use scores (ie, AUSā‰„7). Also, in patients with stable CAD, we examined adherence to the following European Society of Cardiology recommendations: (A) per cent of patients with complex coronary anatomy treated after heart team discussion; (B) per cent of fractional flow reserve-guided PCI for borderline stenoses in patients without documented ischaemia; (C) per cent of patients receiving guideline-directed medical therapy at the time of PCI as well as use of provocative test of ischaemia according to pretest probability (PTP) of CAD.ResultsOf the 401 mappable PCIs (91%), 38.7% (95% CI 33.9 to 43.6) were classified as appropriate, 47.6% (95% CI 42.7 to 52.6) as uncertain and 13.7% (95% CI 10.5% to 17.5%) as inappropriate. Median PTP in patients with stable CAD without known coronary anatomy was 69% (78% intermediate PTP, 22% high PTP). Ischaemia testing use was similar (p=0.71) in patients with intermediate (n=140, 63%) and with high PTP (n=40, 66%). In patients with stable CAD (n=352) guideline adherence to the three recommendations explored was: (A) 11%; (B) 25%; (C) 23%. AUS was higher in patients evaluated by the heart team as compared with patients who were not (7 (6.8) vs 5 (4.7); p=0.001).ConclusionsUse of heart team approaches and adherence to guideline recommendations on coronary revascularisation in a real-world setting is limited. This pilot study documents the feasibility of measuring appropriateness and guideline adherence in clinical practice and identifies substantial opportunities for quality improvement.Trial registration numberNCT02748603.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b887b1150817b7a8fa6c7c5dca5b0c9b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016909