P6172Management of silent myocardial ischemia in patients with peripheral arterial disease needing surgery

2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Erglis ◽  
G Latkovskis ◽  
D Krievins ◽  
S Jegere ◽  
I Kumsars ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) needing surgery have increased risk for post-operative myocardial infarction (MI)/death due to coexisting coronary artery disease (CAD). Coronary CT angiography (CTA)-derived fractional flow reserve (FFRCT) can reliably identify ischemia-producing coronary stenosis in patients with suspected CAD but its value in PAD patients is unknown. Purpose To determine the prevalence of silent coronary ischemia in PAD patients undergoing surgery and to assess the value of FFRCT in guiding management of patients with multisite arterial ischemia. Methods Patients admitted for elective carotid, aortic or peripheral vascular surgery with no cardiac history or CAD symptoms were enrolled in a prospective, open-label, ethics committee-approved study and underwent pre-op CTA and FFRCT evaluation with results available to treating physicians. Ischemia-producing coronary stenosis was defined as FFRCT≤0.80 distal to stenosis in >2mm diameter vessels. Patient management was guided by a multidisciplinary team of cardiologists, cardiovascular surgeons and anaesthesiologists. Primary endpoint was major adverse cardiac events (MACE= cardiac death, MI, urgent revasc) at 30 days with follow up at 3,6,12 months. Results Coronary CTA and FFRCT analysis was performed in 179 consecutive patients (age 66±8 years, male 78%, hypertension 79%, diabetes 10%, dyslipidemia 31%, smoking 37%). CTA revealed extensive coronary calcification (Agatston score 995±1004, range 0–4810) and ≥50% stenosis in 64% of patients. Ischemic coronary stenosis (FFRCT≤0.80) was present in 114 patients (64%) with FFRCT ≤0.75 in 97 (54%) and multivessel ischemia in 63 (35%). Clinically indicated vascular surgery was performed as planned in 170/179 patients (95%) with cardiac anaesthesia and close monitoring and postponed in 9 patients for coronary revascularization (3) or medical/other therapy (6). There were no post-op cardiac complications. Elective coronary angiography, performed 1–3 months post surgery in 86 patients with left main, severe or multivessel ischemia, confirmed significant stenosis in each patient with revascularization in 58 patients (53 PCI and 5 CABG) including 8 for LM disease. There have been no cardiovascular deaths; 3 patients have died of lung cancer which was first discovered on CTA. One patient had peri-procedural MI at time of PCI and one had MI and urgent PCI at 6 months. MACE at 30 days=0/179, 3 months = 1/154, 6 months=2/123, 12 months=0/65. Conclusions Patients undergoing elective PAD surgery have a high prevalence (64%) of unsuspected ischemia-producing coronary stenosis. Pre-op diagnosis with CTA- FFRCT can help guide a multidisciplinary team approach with optimum medical management and staged peripheral and coronary revascularization. Favourable early results are promising and suggest the need for prospective controlled studies to define the role of coronary revascularization in PAD patients. Acknowledgement/Funding Heartflow, Inc.; Mikrotikls Ltd

2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 205031211987106
Author(s):  
Judy Wang ◽  
Jasamine Coles-Black ◽  
Matija Radojcic ◽  
Jason Chuen ◽  
Philip Smart

Objectives: High-quality research is fundamental to the advancement of surgical practice. Currently, there is no quantitative assessment of the research output of vascular surgeons in Australia and New Zealand. By conducting this bibliometric analysis, we aim to provide an objective representation of the trends in vascular surgery and guide future research. Methods: A list of all current vascular surgeons in Australia and New Zealand was compiled from the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons ‘Find a Surgeon’ website tool and correlated with the Australia and New Zealand Society for Vascular Surgery database. A Scopus search of each surgeon’s author profile over the last 20 years was conducted. Results: In total, 2120 articles were published by 208 Australasian vascular surgeons between 1998 and July 2018, with an overall increase in publications over time. Audits or case series were the most published type of study and only 8% of the publications were of high-level evidence. The most popular topics were thoracoabdominal aortic pathologies (24%), followed by peripheral arterial disease (15%). Chronological analysis illustrates an increasing volume of peripheral arterial disease research over time and there is a clear trend towards more endovascular and hybrid surgery publications. The top 10 (5%) highest publishing authors by h-index account for 41% of all publications and 49% of all citations and are also responsible for producing significantly more high-level evidence research. Conclusion: Australasian vascular surgeons have made a significant contribution to medical research. However, the majority of these articles are of low-level evidence. In this time, there has been an increasing number of publications on endovascular and hybrid surgery in keeping with the trend in clinical practice. These areas, as well as research regarding peripheral arterial disease, show potential for high-evidence research in the future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 24-25
Author(s):  
Reid A. Ravin ◽  
Daniel K. Han ◽  
Kassandra Carrion ◽  
Nicole Ilonzo ◽  
Peter L. Faries

2017 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 85-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martina Thiney ◽  
Nellie Della Schiava ◽  
Patrick Feugier ◽  
Patrick Lermusiaux ◽  
Jacques Ninet ◽  
...  

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