Abstract

Non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) is a leading cause of emergency hospitalisation across Europe. This study evaluates the in-hospital and mid-term outcomes of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) following NSTEMI. A retrospective analysis of all cases undergoing isolated CABG following NSTEMI from September/2017 to September/2022 at our Centre. Patients were stratified according to in-hospital survival. Patient characteristics, operative details, and procedural complications were compared between those who survived and those who did not. Predictors of in-hospital and mid-term mortality were evaluated using logistic and Cox regression modelling. Kaplan Meier analysis was used to generate a survival curve for all alive patients at the time of discharge. Among 1011 patients (median age 64 [56 - 72] years, 852 [84.3%] male), 735 (72.7%) underwent urgent, 239 (23.6%) elective, and 37 (3.7%) emergency CABG. The in-hospital mortality was 1.5% (15/1011 patients). Those who died were more likely to be NYHA class III/IV, have LVEF <21%, severe renal impairment, peripheral vascular disease (PVD), or poor mobility. Emergency procedures, pre-operative ventilation, inotropic support, and intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) use were also more prevalent among those who died. Logistic regression modelling revealed new postoperative stroke (OR:22.0; 95% CI:3.6-135.5; p=0.001), pre-operative IABP use (11.4; 2.4-53.7; p=0.002), new haemodialysis (9.6; 2.7-34.7; p<0.001), PVD (5.6; 1.6-20.0; p=0.008), and poor mobility (OR: 4.8; 95% CI: 1.3-18.2; p=0.022) as independent predictors of in-hospital mortality. In conclusion, new postoperative stroke, pre-operative IABP use, new haemodialysis, PVD and poor mobility are independent predictors of mortality in NSTEMI patients undergoing isolated CABG.

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