Coronary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Bilateral Internal Thoracic Artery Revascularization Using in Situ or Y Graft Configurations: a Prospective Randomized Clinical, Functional and Angiographic Evaluation
Bilateral internal thoracic arteries (BITA) demonstrated superiority over other grafts to
the left coronary system in terms of patency and survival benefit. Several BITA
configurations are proposed for left-sided myocardial revascularization, but the ideal BITA
assemblage is still unidentified.
From 03/2003 to 08/2006, 1297 consecutive patients underwent isolated bypass surgery in our
institution. 481 patients met the inclusion criteria for randomization and 304 (64%) were
randomized. Patients were allocated to BITA in situ grafting (n=147) or Y configuration
(n=152) then evaluated for clinical, functional, and angiographic outcome after 6 months, 3
and 7 years . Patient telephone interviews were conducted every 3 months and a stress test
performed twice yearly under the referring cardiologist's supervision. Angiographic
follow-up was performed 6 months after surgery. The primary and secondary end points were,
respectively, major adverse cerebro-cardiovascular events (MACCE) and the proportion of ITA
grafts that were completely occluded at follow-up angiography.
Study design All patients referred for isolated surgical coronary revascularization from
April 2003 to July 2006 were screened according to the inclusion criteria (Table 1).
Patients were randomly assigned to undergo one of two alternative surgical strategies: BITA
in situ (LITA to the LAD and RITA to the marginal branches into the transverse sinus) or
BITA Y (LITA to the LAD and RITA to the marginal branches but anastomozed proximally to the
LITA in a Y configuration as described by Barra JA et al 3). Randomization was performed the
day before the operation after the patient's record was reviewed without knowledge of the
preoperative angiogram. Complementary grafting was performed with either a saphenous vein
graft or a pedicled right gastroepiloic artery depending on the location and quality of the
targeted coronary vessel, but also depending on the surgeon's choice. All patients were
scheduled for a systematic angiography at 6 and 36 months following surgery. All patients
gave written informed consent at the time of bypass surgery and before the angiographic
investigation. The study protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee at our institution.
Patients From 2003 to 2006, 1297 consecutive patients underwent isolated bypass surgery at
our institution. Of these, 481 patients (37%) met the inclusion criteria for enrolment in
the study (Figure 1). Three hundred four of 481 patients (63%) were actually randomized. The
remaining 177 patients were not randomized because of a) refusal of systematic angiographic
control (85%) and b) logistic incapacity to randomize patients (15%). BITA grafting was
performed with a in situ configuration in 147 patients and with a Y configuration in 152.
Five patients initially allocated to the BITA in situ group were excluded for protocol
violations. In these cases, the surgeon decided to deviate from the assigned
revascularisation strategy in favor of a BITA Y configuration. Patient's demographics and
clinical characteristics are shown in Table 2. The BITA were harvested and grafted as
previously described 4-5. Operative characteristics are detailed in Table 3.
Postoperative management and follow-up Patients received prophylactic low dose fractionated
heparin postoperatively, and 160 mg of aspirin daily starting on postoperative day 2.
Patients were interviewed by telephone at 3 and 6 months and then twice yearly thereafter.
If the patient had been hospitalized between interviews, in-patient records were obtained.
Patients had a systematic stress test on a cycloergometer twice a year performed under the
supervision of their referring cardiologist.
Follow-up angiography was scheduled at both 6 months and 3 years after surgery.
Nitroglycerin (2 mg) was injected into each graft before filming. At least two orthogonal
views of each ITA graft were obtained, with continued exposure as required to visualize
distal runoff and the size of the target coronary bed.
Data analysis The clinical end point was occurrence of MACCE defined as a combined end-point
including: death from any cause; perioperative myocardial infarction (occurring between 0
and 30 days); late myocardial infarction (occurring between 31 days and 6 years); additional
cardiac surgery; coronary angioplasty; and stroke. Myocardial infarction was defined as the
apparition of a new Q wave, a rise of more than 10 ng / ml of troponin in the early post
operative period or any episode of chest pain with typical rise and fall of cardiac enzymes
thereafter.
The angiographic end point was the proportion of ITA grafts that were completely occluded at
follow-up angiography. Complete occlusion was defined as the absence of visible
opacification of the target coronary vessel (TIMI flow grade 0).
All postoperative angiograms were independently reviewed by 2 investigators; discrepancies
in patency definition were reviewed by a third investigator and resolved by consensus.
Statistical analysis We calculated that the enrolment of at least 152 patients per group
would provide the study with 80% power to detect a relative reduction of 8 % in the rate of
graft occlusion, from an estimated 10% with BITA Y grafting 6 to 2% with BITA in situ 7
grafting, assuming a 20% within-patient correlation for graft occlusion, a two-tailed test,
and an alpha value of 0.05. Data are expressed as the mean ± 1 SD. In bivariate analyses,
the association of independent variables with each outcome variable was tested with Chi
square test for independent samples (binary variables).
All p-values are two-tailed. The Statistical Analysis Software (SAS, 9.1 releases, SAS
Institute Inc., SAS Campus Drive, Cary, NC USA) was used in the statistical analysis.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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