articleCirculationFeb 11, 2008Closed access

Optimal Medical Therapy With or Without Percutaneous Coronary Intervention to Reduce Ischemic Burden

Department of Veterans Affairs · Université de Montréal · +3 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Extent and severity of myocardial ischemia are determinants of risk for patients with coronary artery disease, and ischemia reduction is an important therapeutic goal. The Clinical Outcomes Utilizing Revascularization and Aggressive Drug Evaluation (COURAGE) nuclear substudy compared the effectiveness of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for ischemia reduction added to optimal medical therapy (OMT) with the use of myocardial perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (MPS). METHODS AND RESULTS: Of the 2287 COURAGE patients, 314 were enrolled in this substudy of serial rest/stress MPS performed before treatment and 6 to 18 months (mean=374+/-50 days) after randomization using paired exercise (n=84) or vasodilator stress (n=230). A blinded core laboratory analyzed quantitative MPS measures of percent ischemic myocardium. Moderate to severe ischemia encumbered > or = 10% myocardium. The primary end point was > or = 5% reduction in ischemic myocardium at follow-up. Treatment groups had similar baseline characteristics. At follow-up, the reduction in ischemic myocardium was greater with PCI+OMT (-2.7%; 95% confidence interval, -1.7%, -3.8%) than with OMT (-0.5%; 95% confidence interval, -1.6%, 0.6%; P or = 10% residual ischemia on follow-up MPS (P=0.002 [risk-adjusted P=0.09]).

Conclusions

In COURAGE patients who underwent serial MPS, adding PCI to OMT resulted in greater reduction in ischemia compared with OMT alone. Our findings suggest a treatment target of > or = 5% ischemia reduction with OMT with or without coronary revascularization.

Citation impact

1,599
total citations
FWCI
87.30
Percentile
100%
References
21
Citations per year

Authors

25

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Percutaneous coronary intervention
  • Medical therapy
  • Cardiology
  • Internal medicine
  • Percutaneous
  • Myocardial infarction
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.