4.3 Article

Comparison of Six Risk Scores in Patients With Triple Vessel Coronary Artery Disease Undergoing PCI: Competing Factors Influence Mortality, Myocardial Infarction, and Target Lesion Revascularization

Journal

CATHETERIZATION AND CARDIOVASCULAR INTERVENTIONS
Volume 82, Issue 6, Pages 855-868

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ccd.25008

Keywords

risk score; atherosclerosis; coronary artery disease; stenting

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K08HL111330]

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ObjectivesTo compare the discriminatory value of differing risk scores for predicting clinical outcomes following PCI in routine practice. BackgroundVarious risk scores predict outcomes after PCI. However, these scores consider markedly different factors, from purely anatomical (SYNTAX risk score [SRS]) to purely clinical (ACEF, modified ACEF [ACEFmod], NCDR), while other scores combine both elements (Clinical SYNTAX score [CSS], NY State Risk Score [NYSRS]). MethodsPatients with triple vessel and/or LM disease with 12 month follow-up were studied from a single center PCI registry. Exclusion criteria included STEMI presentation, prior revascularization and shock. Clinical events at 12 months were compared to baseline risk scores, according to score tertiles and area under receiver-operating-characteristic curves (AUC). ResultsWe identified 584 eligible patients (69.812.3yrs, 405 males). All scores were predictive of mortality, with the SRS being least predictive (AUC=0.66). The most accurate scores for mortality were the CSS and ACEF (AUC=0.76 for both: P=0.019 and 0.08 vs. SRS, respectively). For TLR, while the SRS trended toward being positively predictive (P = 0.075), several scores trended towards a negative association, which reached significance for the NCDR (P = 0.045). The SRS and CSS were the only scores predictive of MI (both P<0.05). No score was particularly accurate for predicting MACE (death+MI+TLR), with AUCs ranging from 0.53 (NCDR) to 0.63 (SRS). ConclusionsCompeting factors influence mortality, MI and TLR after PCI. An increasing burden of comorbidities is associated with mortality, whereas anatomical complexity predicts MI. By combining these outcomes to predict MACE, all scores show reduced utility. (c) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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