Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Dynamic Evaluation of Coronary Intervention
To evaluate the long-term efficacy of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) and alternative angioplasty devices in patients with coronary heart disease. There are four registries. The first registry followed 3,079 patients who received PTCA between 1977 and 1982. The second registry followed 1,500 patients from the first registry for a minimum of five years and followed 2,000 newly entered patients who received PTCA in 1985 and 1986 so that the second cohort would also be followed for five years. The third registry, the New Approaches to Coronary Intervention (NACI), followed approximately 4,424 patients between November 1990 and February 1997. The dynamic evaluation study will follow a total of 6,000 procedures.
BACKGROUND:
In 1977, the selective coronary catheter which was developed and introduced by Dr. Andreas
Gruentzig and his colleagues in Zurich, was first proposed as a therapeutic tool for the
dilatation of obstructions in the coronary arteries. Initial reports on the technique were
enthusiastic and many teams began to evaluate the procedure. In March 1979, the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute initiated an interim registry on PTCA to expedite the
evaluation of the technique and in December 1979 released a Request for Proposals to
established a formal registry. A contract was awarded in August 1980 to the University of
Pittsburgh.
The 1979 registry collected cases prospectively beginning in 1979 as well as retrospectively
back to the introduction of the procedure in 1977. To participate in the registry, centers
were required to submit data on all patients who had a guide catheter introduced as the
first step in the angioplasty procedure. From 1979 to 1982 3,248 patients were entered from
105 clinical sites and in 1982, the registry stopped entering new cases and shifted its
effort to follow-up. Sixteen of the largest centers participated in the five year follow-up.
During the follow-up period, the range of patients expanded greatly with technologic
advances and clinical experience. The registry was reopened in 1985 to confirm and document
changes in angioplasty techniques and results. Methods of data collection in the new
registry were the same as in the old. Within ten months, 2,094 new patients were enrolled.
The PTCA III or NACI Registry was established in 1990 to follow revascularization devices or
methods other than PTCA. Utilization of PTCA experienced an explosive growth since it was
first introduced. However, despite this rapid growth in technological improvements and
techniques, balloon angioplasty is not universally successful. Problems relate to failure to
cross chronic total occlusions, failure to successfully dilate elastic lesions, intimal
dissection and abrupt closure which leads to emergency surgery, and most particularly,
restenosis of the dilated segment. In the late 1970s, diverse technologies were developed in
an attempt to counter the problems plaguing coronary angioplasty. These technologies
include: mechanical devices for crossing total occlusions; atherectomy catheters; abrasive
athero-dispersion devices; intracoronary stents; ablative lasers; hot-tip lasers, and laser
balloon dilation techniques. Each of the above device categories entered clinical testing.
However, these devices were in a state of flux. Moreover, these devices were utilized in
different clinical settings, with different definitions of success and complication rates
and different follow-up regimens. Therefore, it was difficult to judge the relative efficacy
of any single device in comparison to standard PTCA. The need to establish a mechanism
capable of evaluating each device was, therefore, of practical importance from a clinical
and investigational standpoint. The primary purpose of the registry was not to compare
devices but to follow simultaneously the progress of multiple devices in a parallel fashion,
using common methodologies and definitions in their early clinical usage.
The NHLBI "Dynamic Registry," which for years has provided objective, "real world"
assessment of the changing practice of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was extended
through June 2007. In just 25 years, the practice of PCI has evolved from balloon
angioplasty-to directional and rotational coronary atherectomy-to bare-metal stents-to new
interventional devices including lasers and therapeutic ultrasound-to intracoronary
radiation-to distal protection devices-and most recently to the widely anticipated
introduction of drug-eluting stents. These evolutions, which have been accompanied by a 150%
increase in PCI procedures in the U.S. in the past 8 years alone, necessitate ongoing
evaluation in diverse clinical practices across all patient subgroups, as many promising
results observed initially in clinical trials are not realized, or are only marginally
realized, in clinical practice. The multi-center Dynamic Registry fulfills this mission, and
is the only formal registry of consecutive PCI-treated cases that captures both in-hospital
and long-term patient outcomes, while characterizing initial procedural strategy and outcome
in great detail on the patient and lesion level.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The second registry established five year mortality and morbidity rates for the 1985-1986
cohort as well as determined functional status and subsequent revascularization. Secondary
goals included estimating rates of clinically apparent restenosis for all patients and for
important subgroups, determining recurrence of symptoms, seeking predictors of long-term
response to PTCA overall and in subgroups, determining PTCA success angiographically, and
providing background information for the NHLBI clinical trial, Bypass Angioplasty
Revascularization Investigation (BARI). Sixteen center participated in the second registry.
Patient follow-up was performed independently of medical care visits. The National Death
Index was searched for patients who were judged lost to follow-up. Each center determined
angiographically the results of angioplasty but also sent all cineangiograms to a central
laboratory.
The third registry, NACI, was designed to gather information on the use of three types of
intervention technologies other than PTCA. The interventional techniques were loosely
grouped into several categories such as atherectomy, stents, and laster methods. Patients
were contacted by telephone at six weeks, six months, and a year. The centers performed a
treadmill test and a repeat angiogram at six months. To be investigated, a technique must
have been used at two or more centers and a center must have used the intervention in at
least five patients. Following acceptance into the registry for a technique, the clinical
site admitted alll subsequent patients consecutively. Results were analyzed in batches of
fifty, examining both patients and lesions as analytic units. The primary endpoint was
reduction of a target lesion by at least 20 percent and to less than 50 percent final
diameter stenosis without major complications. Secondary endpoints common to all devices
included major events and additional events, health status at follow-up, and patency status
at six months. In addition, there were secondary endpoints specific to the device under
study. In 1993, an independent Angiographic Core Laboratory was established for the NACI
under R01HL49527.
Beginning in July 1997, the PTCA Registry and the NACI registry were renewed through June
2002 under U01HL33292. The purpose of what could be considered a fourth registry was to
conduct a dynamic evaluation of new device usage patterns, as well as intermediate and
follow-up outcomes in patients undergoing percutaneous transluminal coronary
revascularization. Three waves of 2,000 consecutive patients each, 18 months apart, were
entered from 13 participating clinical sites and followed for one year. The design was such
that women and minority patients were oversampled. The clinical and angiographic
characteristics of patients undergoing a coronary intervention procedure were described.
There was a registration of frequency of different procedures used, such as conventional
balloon, new devices and combinations of devices to provide information about the value of
added new devices. Initial success rates and complications were evaluated. There was one
year follow-up of clinical events and subsequent procedures and assessment of one year
symptom status including clinical re-stenosis and durability of these interventions.
Clinical and anatomic criteria influencing choice of angioplasty strategies were identified.
Procedural outcomes were examined in subgroups, including women, African Americans,
diabetics, patients with prior revascularization, and those over 75 years of age.
Sub-studies of cost and cost-effectiveness of coronary interventional procedures were
developed.
The Dynamic Registry was extended through June 2007 to a) continue annual patient follow-up
from 3 to 5 years for the 2020 Wave 2 Registry patients who underwent PCI in 1999
(characterized by frequent stent use of varying types); b) perform one-year follow-up on the
2124 Wave 3 Registry patients, and annual follow-up to 5 years on the approximately 150 Wave
3 patients who underwent PCI in 2001/2002 and received the then novel intracoronary
radiation therapy; c) enroll and follow annually for 4 years a Wave 4 of 2000 Registry
patients who will undergo PCI following the introduction of the much awaited drug-eluting
stents into clinical practice; d) enroll and follow for at least one year a Wave 5 of 2000
Registry patients who will undergo PCI at a time when subsequent generations of drug-eluting
stents have penetrated clinical practice. As successfully accomplished with all previous
waves of patient enrollment, women and minorities will continue to be oversampled in the
Registry, as an important study aim is to investigate potential health disparities in
clinical practice and outcome by gender, and race/ethnicity, while controlling for
socioeconomic status. Finally, the investigators will coordinate a cost effectiveness
analysis on the use of drug-eluting stents in a same of Wave 4 registry patients supported
through a separate source of funding, and pilot test new data collection forms in the
setting of peripheral arterial disease catheter-based interventions.
Another extension was received in 2007 with funding concluding in 2012. This study involves
the long-term follow-up of participants recruited in 2004 (Wave 4) and 2006 (Wave 5) across
16 medical centers. All subjects will be followed for a total of 5 years and participants
from Waves 4 and 5 have already been followed for 3 and 1 years, respectively. Follow-up
will be conducted via annual telephone interviews and these data will be used to track the
incidence of long-term outcomes. All identified deaths and myocardial infarctions will be
reviewed by an adjudication committee to (1) classify cause of death and (2) determine
whether or not the myocardial infarction is related to stent thrombosis. The research aims
are to: (1) Compare 5-year mortality and myocardial infarction between participants treated
with drug eluting stents (DES) versus bare metal stents (BMS) overall, within "high-risk"
subgroups, and by "off-label" stent use; (2) Evaluate cardiac and non-cardiac causes of
mortality among participants treated with DES versus BMS; (3) Compare 5-year mortality and
repeat revascularization by the sirolimus-eluting versus paclitaxel-eluting stent overall,
within "high-risk" subgroups, and by "off-label" stent use; and (4) Investigate mechanisms
that contribute to stent thrombosis, myocardial infarction, death, and repeat
revascularization in participants treated with BMS and DES. In summary, by extending the
active NHLBI Dynamic Registry, we will analyze long-term outcome data on several thousand
PCI participants treated with BMS and DES.
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