Is Complete Revascularization Now Compulsory MULTISTARS AMI and FIRE in Context

Описание к видео Is Complete Revascularization Now Compulsory MULTISTARS AMI and FIRE in Context

Michelle O'Donoghue and interventional cardiologist Sahil Parikh discuss data presented at ESC on benefits for complete revascularization in both STEMI and NSTEMI that also extend to older patients.
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/...

-- TRANSCRIPT --
Michelle L. O'Donoghue, MD, MPH: Hi. This is Dr Michelle O'Donoghue reporting for Medscape. Joining me today is Dr Sahil Parikh, who's a cardiologist and an interventionalist at Columbia University. He's an associate professor of medicine.

We'll be discussing two interesting trials that were presented at the ESC Congress here in Amsterdam. They do have the potential to be very practice-changing, so I think it's worth talking about.

The FIRE Trial
The first trial we'll be talking about is the FIRE trial. Perhaps setting the stage, Sahil, I'd love to get your thoughts. We've had data in this space to suggest that, for patients with STEMI [ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction], a strategy of complete revascularization — and not only treating the culprit lesion but also treating additional lesions — may be of benefit. Where does that lead us in terms of what we didn't know?

Sahil A. Parikh, MD: I think that the practice has moved, at least in the United States, over the past two decades, from staging percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs) over 30 days from index to intervention to now trying to do patients in the same hospitalization whenever possible to achieve complete revascularization.

I think these data support not only that complete revascularization is compulsory now in these patients, but also doing it sooner rather than later, and that the benefit applies to most of the patients that we see in clinical practice. In the earlier data, the patients were relatively youthful — under Medicare age, less than 65 — and now this dataset has a median age of 80. This is more like the real-world clinical practice that most of us are encountering, and it extends the benefit, perhaps, greater than we've ever seen before.

O'Donoghue: The FIRE trial is interesting. As you say, it enrolled patients who were over the age of 75, where I think that some proceduralists are probably a little bit hesitant to think about complete revascularization due to concerns about any additional contrast load on their kidneys and other types of comorbidities. Of course, for any trial, there's going to be some patient selection.

I think it's very reassuring that even in this older patient group, a strategy of treating all the lesions — and not only in STEMI but also in non-STEMI patients — reduced cardiovascular events and mortality. I was really quite impressed by the mortality benefit.

Parikh: The mortality curve is almost surprising to me. On the other hand, it emboldens us now that we can treat these patients more completely and earlier in their clinical presentation. Certainly, we worried about contrast exposure and the duration of procedures in this older population, but it seems that the benefit that's derived, which we saw in younger patients where we had a natural inclination to be more aggressive, extends also to this older population.

MULTISTARS AMI
O'Donoghue: To the question of timing, as you mentioned, prior to this, we had a study presented earlier this year, the BIOVASC trial, which also was suggestive that maybe earlier complete revascularization was better. But it wasn't a significant difference, at least for the primary outcome. Now we have MULTISTARS AMI, which is very supportive of what we saw earlier this year, suggesting that complete revascularization really at the time that you're treating the culprit may be the way to go.

Parikh: All of us, as interventionalists, are circumspect about what we might do in the middle of the night vs what we would do in the light of day. Certainly it seems clear, particularly if it's straightforward anatomy, that taking care of it in the index procedure is not only saving contrast and fluoroscopy time, but it's also providing a clinical benefit to the patients. That's something that will also impact how clinicians interpret these data. Previously, there was always a question about whether we should just do it in the same hospitalization or do it at the same time. I think now, increasingly, we're emboldened to do more in the index procedure.

O'Donoghue: When you're thinking about nonculprit lesions and which ones to treat, do you always make that determination based on physiologic guidance of some kind? Are you using instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR)? What's your practice?

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/...

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