Abstract
Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has restricted availability of ICU resources. Symptomatic patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) normally considered surgical candidates have therefore required alternative revascularization with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). The UK-REVASC registry describes the demographics and in-hospital clinical outcomes of this novel patient cohort. Methods: From 1 st March to 31 st May 2020, anonymised data of 171 patients from 38 UK centres were enrolled in a prospective, observational registry. All were on surgical waiting lists or considered for surgery. Results: The demographics, procedural characteristics and outcomes are shown in Tables 1-3. A comparison with routine PCI British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) data and UK isolated coronary bypass surgical data are listed, where available and appropriate. The median age was 68 (IQR 60-76) years. There was significantly more previous MI, PCI and CABG in the routine PCI database than in ReVasc Registry patients, perhaps suggesting a more acute presentation with accelerated symptoms in the test group. These were however complex patients with a mean SYNTAX Score (SS) of 27.8 (range 9-65) and >20x the number of LMS plus multi-vessel disease compared to the routine PCI group, which is reflected in a high use of adjunctive imaging. Radial access was very high at 94.1%. PCI success was 97.0%. Complete revascularization was achieved in 52% with the mean residual SS 1.42 (0-20) in these. There were 2 deaths, however the mortality rate was comparable with published surgical data. Furthermore, a 50% reduction in in-patient stay was observed. Conclusion: In this multi-centre UK registry, in-hospital outcomes following PCI for patients with complex coronary disease, who would typically be treated with CABG, compared well with the surgical data. This suggests that the role of PCI could be extended. Future longer term follow-up however is required and planned.
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