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Volume 158, Issue 5, Pages 755-760 (November 2009)


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Contribution of angiographic and electrocardiographic parameters of reperfusion to prediction of mortality and morbidity after acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction: Insights from the Assessment of Pexelizumab in Acute Myocardial Infarction trial

for the APEX-AMI InvestigatorsSorin J. Brener, MDa, Cynthia M. Westerhout, PhDb, Yuling Fu, MDb, Thomas G. Todaro, MDc, David J. Moliterno, MDd, Galen S. Wagner, MDe, Christopher B. Granger, MDe, Paul W. Armstrong, MDbCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 24 July 2009; accepted 8 September 2009. published online 05 October 2009.

Background

Reperfusion with primary percutaneous intervention (PCI) in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction leads to improved clinical outcomes. The contribution angiographic vs electrocardiographic reperfusion parameters confer on prognosis is unclear.

Methods

A prespecified subset of the APEX-AMI trial patients was analyzed by independent angiographic and electrocardiographic core laboratories (n = 1,018). Angiographic reperfusion after PCI and electrocardiogram 30 minutes post-PCI were assessed.

Results

Of the 941 patients in the angiographic substudy, 796 (85%) attained post-PCI Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) flow 3 and 852 (91%) had TIMI Myocardial Perfusion Grade (TMPG) 2/3. There were 664 (71%) patients with residual ST elevation (ST-E) <2 mm. Ninety-day mortality and death/CHF/shock were lower in patients with TIMI flow 3 vs <3 (1.9% vs 6.2%, P = .002; 5.8% vs 10.4%, P = .044) and those with TMPG 2/3 vs 0/1 (2.0% vs 7.9%, P = .001; 6.0% vs 11.9%, P = .028). Patients with residual ST-E <2 mm had similar rates of mortality as those with ≥2 mm (2.3% vs 3.3%, P = .374) but lower rates of death/CHF/shock (5.2% vs 9.6%, P = .013). After multivariable adjustment, only post-PCI TMPG 2/3 was significantly associated with survival (P = .001), whereas residual ST-E (P = .606) and post-PCI TIMI flow grade (P = .086) were not. Conversely, residual ST-E ≥2 mm (P = .012) rather than angiographic reperfusion was associated with the composite of death/CHF/shock events.

Conclusion

Angiographic and electrocardiographic estimates of reperfusion with primary PCI in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction provide different and complementary predictions of morbidity and mortality.

a New York Methodist Hospital, Brooklyn, NY

b University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

c Medpace, Cincinnati, OH

d University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY

e Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Paul W. Armstrong, MD, University of Alberta-Canadian VIGOUR Centre, 2-51 Medical Sciences Building, Edmonton, Canada AB T6G 2H7.

 Clinical trial registration information: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00091637.

 Morton J. Kern, MD seved as guest editor for this manuscript.

PII: S0002-8703(09)00726-1

doi:10.1016/j.ahj.2009.09.009


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