Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Same Procedure Cardiac Hybrid Surgery in a Specialty Built OR-- A Pilot Study
This study will combine coronary stenting with minimally invasive robotic coronary bypass surgery, accomplished with the use of the da Vinci robot, to restore blood flow to occluded coronary arteries. Two previously approved and commonly performed procedures used to treat coronary artery disease(coronary stenting and robotic bypass surgery) are being combined into a hybrid surgery in a specialty built operating room. Patients with low risk coronary lesions will undergo cardiac hybrid revascularization using stenting and LIMA to LAD robotic bypass concomitantly. Patients' postoperative bleeding rates, angiographs and complication free rates will be recorded.
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the leading cause of death in the United States and becomes
more common as the population ages (American Heart Association, 2003). The symptoms of CAD
may not become perceptible until the condition has advanced to a severe and serious stage,
which might explain the large mortality and morbidity rates associated with heart disease.
At this point there are many procedures available to treat CAD all of which aim to improve
myocardial blood flow, stop angina, increase exercise ability and ultimately free patients
from medications and improve their quality of life. Medications are used to reduce blood
pressure and relieve strain on the heart. Cardiologists use angioplasty, which compresses
plaque deposits, and stenting, in which a small wire mesh tube is inserted into the diseased
artery to revascularize the heart muscle. On-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG)
redirects blood flow around clogged vessels of the heart and is commonly used by cardiac
surgeons to treat CAD because it has been proven to yield the lowest restenosis rate of all
revascularization techniques (Cisowski, 2002). CABG is an effective yet painful and traumatic
intervention.
The desire to discover a less distressing approach to coronary artery revascularization has
led to a fairly new cardiac hybrid procedure that involves stenting followed by a minimally
invasive left internal mammary artery (LIMA) to left anterior descending artery (LAD) bypass
graft (Amodeo, 2002). The hybrid procedure for revascularization carries a lower morbidity
than does on-pump CABG and is also quickly gaining acceptance in the surgical community (de
Canniere et al, 2001). The two procedures of hybrid revascularization are currently performed
within 24 to 48 hours of each other with little collaboration between cardiac surgeons and
cardiologist.
This study will asses the efficacy and safety of cardiac hybrid surgery that combines
stenting and robotic LIMA to LAD grafting in the same procedure in a specialty built
operating room. Long term use of the antiplatelet inhibitor, clopidogrel, to be taken by
patients in this study, was proven to significantly reduce the risk of adverse ischemic
events after percutaneous coronary interventions (Steinhubl, 2002). In addition, the
application of Bivalirudin (Direct Thrombin Inhibitor) will be assessed in this integrated
myocardial revascularization scenario. The many attractive aspects of robotic hybrid bypass
include the avoidance of the procedural phases (arrested heart, blood transfusion, median
sternotomy and cardiopulmonary bypass) of on-pump CABG. Robotic LIMA to LAD bypass and
stenting in the same procedure will allow cardiac surgeons and cardiologists to work together
to help patients obtain safe and effective coronary artery revascularization.
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