Abstract
Coronary artery bypass graft surgery is the treatment of choice for severe left main coronary artery stenosis. The results of a number of multicenter trials have suggested angioplasty with stenting as a possible alternative treatment. The aim of the present study was to analyze the immediate and long-term results of angioplasty with stenting of the left main coronary artery, and to identify factors predictive of death. A total of 38 nonconsecutive patients (mean age 69 [8] years) with a severe lesion in the left main coronary artery were treated with angioplasty and stenting between November 1997 and March 2003. The procedure was elective in 27 patients and urgent in the remaining 11. In 23 patients (60.5%) the left main coronary artery was not protected by aortocoronary bypass. All patients underwent clinical follow-up examination at 25 (20) months. Angiographically documented success was obtained in all patients. However, one patient died from acute occlusion one hour after the operation. Four patients (10%) had a non-Q-wave myocardial infarction. In-hospital mortality was 15.8% (6/38 patients). Five of the 11 patients (45.4%) who underwent emergency angioplasty and stenting died in the hospital from acute myocardial infarction complicated by severe (Killip grade III-IV) heart failure. However, only one of 27 patients (3.7%) in the elective surgery group died (P=.007). Major clinical cardiac events during follow-up occurred in 5 patients (13%); 3 died and the other 2 had recurrent angina. All patients who died had an unprotected left main coronary artery. Cumulative survival rates for the elective group were 92 (0.5)% at 6 months, 88 (0.6)% at 1 year and 86 (0.7)% at 3 years, respectively. For the emergency surgery group cumulative survival rate was 54 (0.2)% at 6 months (P<.05). Elective angioplasty and stenting of the left main coronary artery in selected patients was associated with a high immediate success rate. In patients who underwent elective angioplasty and stenting, the incidence of major cardiac events during follow-up was relatively low. Emergency angioplasty and signs of left ventricular dysfunction were the main predictors of in-hospital mortality.
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