Abstract
The 2001 ACC/AHA guidelines recommend that percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) operators perform at least 75 procedures per year to maintain their competency. We performed a post hoc analysis of prospectively gathered PCI data, in the current era of ubiquitous stent use, at two tertiary cardiac care centres. Operators were assigned to a low (<50 cases per year), intermediate (50-74 cases per year) or high volume (>or=75 cases per year) group. Complications evaluated were death, myocardial infarction, coronary perforation, emergent coronary artery bypass surgery and pericardial tamponade. Between 2000 and 2002, 51 operators performed 6,510 PCIs. Stents were used in 79% of cases. Major complications occurred in 0.45% (7/1,572 cases) for the low-volume group, 1.1% in the intermediate-volume group (16/1,438 cases) and 0.86% (30/3,500 cases) for the high-volume group. After adjusting for baseline factors, low- and intermediate-volume operators were not significantly associated with major complications. This study questions the relationship between operator volume and PCI complications in the current era.
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