Diabetic patients who undergo heart bypass surgery for blocked arteries have a better 5-year survival rate than diabetic patients who undergo angioplasty.
Diabetic patients who undergo heart bypass surgery for blocked arteries have a better 5-year survival rate than diabetic patients who undergo angioplasty, finds recent research published in The Annals of Thoracic Medicine. Bypass surgery offers people with diabetes better long-term survival than stents. People with diabetes who receive stents, even drug eluting stents, are more likely to have recurrent chest pain, require reintervention, and suffer non-fatal heart attacks. Cardiothoracic surgeons and cardiologists can work together to help people with diabetes determine the best procedure for them.
The study, by researchers at Israel''s Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, is the first comparative effectiveness demonstration of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery using both internal thoracic arteries versus percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with DES in patients with diabetes.
Yaron Moshkovitz, MD, Rephael Mohr, MD, and colleagues reviewed 5-year outcomes for 226 patients who underwent bilateral internal thoracic artery (BITA) grafting with outcomes for 271 patients who underwent PCI with DES. They found that BITA patients had a 13% greater survival rate, as well as a lower risk for non-fatal heart attacks, recurrent chest pain, and future re-interventions. Additionally, they found that the more stents that were used, the greater the risk of a major cardiovascular event.
"The long-term benefit of BITA bypass graft surgery is probably related to the protection provided by CABG conduits that bypass the blockages and protect against future blockages," said Dr. Mohr. "Protection from recurrent coronary events due to disease progression cannot be achieved by the stents placed in the coronary arteries during heart catheterization."
People with diabetes mellitus, a disease that affects an estimated 14.5 million Americans, are at higher risk for death from coronary artery disease (CAD) and face increased risks from procedures to treat CAD, according to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. These risks include kidney failure, stroke, and infection.
CAD in diabetic patients is more diffuse and progresses faster than CAD in people who do not have diabetes. Dr. Mohr explained that coronary arterial blood vessels in diabetic patients are smaller, which increase the risk of new blockages of the blood vessels after treatment with stents.
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Peter K. Smith, MD, Division Chief of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery at Duke University Medicine in Durham, NC, said awareness of this study is very important.
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Dr. Mohr said he hopes his research will encourage surgeons to make more considerable use of arterial grafts, especially of the internal thoracic arteries, in diabetic patients. "It is also possible that this paper will influence the interventional cardiologists to discontinue implantation of stents in diabetic patients with a blockage of more than one heart vessel," he said.
Dr. Smith advocates a heart team approach, where surgeons and cardiologists work together to recommend treatment for their patients. "Patients with diabetes should have the benefit of this type of multidisciplinary consideration," he noted. "Patients with diabetes should be aware of their choices, and if bypass surgery is not recommended, they should ask why."
Source-Newswise