Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To compare the efficacy of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery with percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) in patients with multiple vessel coronary heart disease.
BACKGROUND:
PTCA is widely practiced as the procedure of choice for revascularization of the myocardium
in patients with single-vessel disease who are deemed to need intervention and is probably
more widely applied than surgery would be in the same group of patients. No study has shown
improved survival by intervention in such patients. The early natural history study by
Oberman showed survival experience of patients with single-vessel disease, including the
anterior descending, to resemble more closely patients with no coronary artery disease than
those with multivessel disease. Quality of life studies including the CASS randomized study,
which included 27 percent single-vessel disease patients, showed improved exercise tolerance
and less need for medication in patients who received PTCA For single-vessel disease.
Balloon angioplasty in single-vessel disease thus appears justified for the treatment of
angina pectoris.
In multivessel disease the CASS randomized trial has shown an improved survival at seven
years in the subset of patients with three-vessel disease and impaired ventricular function.
However, seven years may prove to be the point of widest separation between the medical and
surgical survival curves, based on the experience of the VA study which has presented
results to 11 years showing convergence of survival experience. Data from the Montreal Heart
Institute also indicate accelerated deterioration of venous grafts five to seven years after
surgery. The late failure of grafts is a potent argument for delaying CABG as long as
possible in the patients with multivessel disease. Should PTCA prove to be only a delaying
action in multivessel disease patients, a delay of several years until the first CABG
operation would confer an obvious advantage, even if repeat PTCA's were required. Repeat
CABG may carry an increased risk and presumably the possibility of inadequate
revascularization as autologous graft material is used up.
As long as treatment for coronary artery disease is only palliative, management for the
individual patient requires a long-term (a lifetime) strategy, beginning with medical
management. PTCA could occupy an intermediate position in the time line of management of
multivessel disease patients if its relative efficiency in providing relief of ischemia and
ability to avoid or delay CABG were known. Most centers performing PTCA now have expanded
the indications for the procedure to patients with multivessel disease. However, its
efficacy in those patients has not been proven. Although data from the NHLBI PTCA Registry
do include patients with multivessel disease, most of those patients underwent only single
PTCA procedures even though they may have had stenoses in other vessels. Hence, a number of
questions must be raised concerning the usefulness of PTCA in patients with multivessel
disease.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Randomized, single-center. A total of 198 patients were randomized to the PTCA group and 194
to the CABG group. As initial treatment, one patient in the CABG group underwent angioplasty
and two patients in the PTCA group underwent surgery, but the groups were followed according
to an intention-to-treat analysis. Randomization was performed on the basis of four
angiographic strata. Data were collected at baseline, and the patients were contacted every
six months for follow-up information. Coronary arteriography and thallium stress scanning
were performed at one and three years. All patients were followed for the duration of the
trial. Repeat angiographic studies were performed in 87 percent of the eligible patients at
one year and in 76 percent at three years. Thallium scans were obtained in 88 percent of the
patients at one year and in 77 percent at three years. The primary endpoint was a composite
of death, Q-wave myocardial infarction within the previous three years, and detection of a
large ischemic defect on thallium scanning at three years. Secondary endpoints involved the
degree of revascularization at one and three years, ventricular function, exercise
performance, the need for subsequent revascularization procedures, the quality of life, and
costs. All patients admitted to Emory University Hospital and Crawford Long Memorial
Hospital for cardiac catheterization, whether entered into the study or not, were entered
into a study registry as were patients who were referred for a revascularization procedure
but who had their initial catheterization performed elsewhere. Recruitment ended in April
1990. The trial has been extended through August 1997 to allow a minimum of eight years and
a maximum of ten years of followup for the registry patients as well as for the main cohort
of randomized patients. Telephone contact is established annually with study participants in
order to determine rates of survival, rehospitalization, repeat revascularization
procedures, and functional status. The justification for the long-term followup is the
evidence that CABG begins to increase its failure rates between five and ten years.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in
the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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