Abstract

The first approach for Type-2 myocardial infarction (T2MI) consists of the elimination of the condition determining the oxygen supply/demand mismatch. However, the long-term impact of medical therapy with beta blockers, statins, aspirin, and P2Y12 inhibitors, used in the case of Type-1 myocardial infarction has been poorly investigated and remains unclear. We, therefore, sought to assess the impact of medical therapy on 1-year mortality in patients with T2MI using a meta-regression analysis. A meta-regression analysis was performed with studies involving in patients with T2MI: 1-year all-cause mortality, rates of beta blockers, statins, aspirin, and P2Y12 inhibitors use were recorded and analyzed. After careful study selection, 8 observational studies were pooled in the analysis, including 3,756 in patients. During meta-regression analysis, a borderline correlation between rates of aspirin, P2Y12 inhibitors, and statins use and 1-year mortality (p=0.087, p=0.05, and p=0.067, respectively) was found; no significant correlation was found at multivariable analysis. In conclusion, in a meta-regression analysis, no significant correlation was found between rates of use of usual drug therapy indicated for Type-1 myocardial infarction (statins, aspirin, P2Y12 inhibitors, β-blockers) and 1-year mortality in T2MI patients.

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