4.8 Article

Survival after coronary revascularization among patients with kidney disease

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 110, Issue 14, Pages 1890-1895

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000143629.55725.D9

Keywords

revascularization; coronary disease; kidney; epidemiology

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Background - The optimal approach to revascularization in patients with kidney disease has not been determined. We studied survival by treatment group (CABG, percutaneous coronary intervention [PCI], or no revascularization) for patients with 3 categories of kidney function: dialysis-dependent kidney disease, non - dialysis-dependent kidney disease, and a reference group ( serum creatinine < 2.3 mg/dL). Methods and Results - Data were derived from the Alberta Provincial Project for Outcomes Assessment in Coronary Heart Disease ( APPROACH), which captures information on all patients undergoing cardiac catheterization in Alberta, Canada. Characteristics and patient survival in 662 dialysis patients (1.6%) and 750 non - dialysis- dependent kidney disease patients (1.8%) were compared with the remainder of the 40 374 patients (96.6%). For the reference group, the adjusted 8-year survival rates for CABG, PCI, and no revascularization (NR) were 85.5%, 80.4%, and 72.3%, respectively ( P < 0.001 for CABG versus NR; P < 0.001 for PCI versus NR). Adjusted survival rates were 45.9% for CABG, 32.7% for PCI, and 29.7% for NR in the nondialysis kidney disease group ( P < 0.001 for CABG versus NR; P = 0.48 for PCI versus NR) and 44.8% for CABG, 41.2% for PCI, and 30.4% for NR in the dialysis group ( P = 0.003 for CABG versus NR; P = 0.03 for PCI versus NR). Conclusions - Compared with no revascularization, CABG was associated with better survival in all categories of kidney function. PCI was also associated with a lower risk of death than no revascularization in reference patients and dialysis- dependent kidney disease patients but not in patients with non - dialysis- dependent kidney disease. The presence of kidney disease or dependence on dialysis should not be a deterrent to revascularization, particularly with CABG.

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