WHAT’S NEW? According to the most recent guidelines on the management of acute coronary syndromes without ST-segment elevation, in non-very high-risk patients with non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), coronary angiography with the intent to perform revascularization should be performed within 24 hours of hospital admission. However, since the previous studies used different, somewhat arbitrary, definitions of very early invasive strategies, there are few data on whether there is a stepwise relationship between the time to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and the long-term mortality rate in patients with NSTEMI undergoing coronary revascularization within 24 hours of admission. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the relationship between door-to-PCI time and long-term mortality in 37 589 patients with NSTEMI, included in the nationwide registry of acute coronary syndromes. After adjusting for 33 clinically relevant variables, we found that the longer the door-to-PCI time, the higher were 12-month and 36-month all-cause mortality rates. |
Introduction
The routine invasive strategy has been shown to be superior to the optimal medical management strategy in patients with non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI). However, the optimal timing of coronary revascularization has not been established yet. The current guidelines on non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndromes (NSTE-ACS) recommend coronary angiography with the intent to perform revascularization within 24 hours from hospital admission in NSTEMI patients, except for very-high risk patients, who should undergo coronary catheterization within 2 hours [1].
Currently, no evidence supports the routine immediate invasive strategy in all patients with NSTE-ACS. Unlike NSTEMI, unstable angina does not lead directly to myocardial injury; therefore, the benefits of very early revascularization might be less pronounced in those patients [2]. Although it is pathophysiologically plausible that more rapid (within 24 hours) revascularization in NSTEMI patients is associated with a mortality rate reduction, it has not been proven in randomized clinical trials [3]. However, in the largest randomized clinical trials comparing different timing strategies in NSTE-ACS patients, the calculation of the time to coronary angiography was based on the randomization time, complicating the interpretation of the results [1]. Moreover, in most of these studies, the proportion of patients who underwent coronary revascularization was lower than 70% [4, 5].
This study aimed to evaluate whether there is a stepwise association between door-to-PCI time and long-term mortality in a cohort of NSTEMI patients who were admitted directly to a PCI-capable center and underwent PCI within 24 hours of admission.
Methods
Patients
We analyzed the data of patients admitted to the hospital for NSTEMI between July 2007 and July 2019, included in a nationwide, prospective registry of acute coronary syndromes (Polish Registry of Acute Coronary Syndromes; PL-ACS). More details regarding PL-ACS have been described previously [6–10]. Briefly, PL-ACS is a clinical registry established in 2003, which was a joint effort of the Silesian Center for Heart Diseases in Zabrze and the Polish Ministry of Health. The goal of the PL-ACS registry is to collect data about clinical characteristics, treatment modalities, and outcomes of patients with acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina in Poland. Data are entered into the database by the attending physician via a web form.
In the current analysis, NSTEMI patients who arrived directly at the PCI-capable center themselves or in an ambulance, and underwent PCI during the index hospitalization, were considered. The exclusion criteria included out-of-hospital cardiac arrest before admission, pulmonary edema or cardiogenic shock on admission, or missing data on these variables, as well as pain-to-admission time longer than 72 hours and admission-to-PCI time longer than 24 hours. Included patients were assigned into twelve groups based on 2-hour intervals of door-to-PCI time. Definitions used in our study are presented in the Supplementary Materials, Definitions.
The outcome of interest and follow-up
The outcome of interest in our study was all-cause mortality analyzed at 12 and 36 months. Vital status and exact death dates were obtained from the National Health Fund, the only payer for healthcare services financed from public funds in Poland. Follow-up data were available for 37 585 (99.99%) patients.
Statistical analysis
Continuous variables were presented as median and interquartile range. Categorical variables were presented as percentages. Door-to-PCI time in patients stratified by year of admission was compared using Jonckheere’s trend test. The mortality rates in the 12 groups of patients who underwent PCI within 24 hours of hospital admission, stratified by 2-hour intervals, were presented as crude mortality rates and adjusted by the propensity score weighting method using overlap weights to reduce indication bias. Overlap weighting is a novel statistical method based on the propensity score to adjust for differences in characteristics between analyzed groups by assigning, to each patient, weights that are proportional to the probability of that patient belonging to the opposite treatment group [11, 12]. The propensity scores were obtained using the logistic regression model, which included 33 clinically relevant baseline characteristic variables that might have influenced the decision about catheterization timing. The complete list of these variables is presented in Supplementary material, Table S1. Before developing the propensity score model, missing data were imputed using the k-nearest neighbors algorithm. The correlations between the 12-month and 36-month unadjusted and adjusted (by the propensity score weighting method using overlap weights) mortality rates and consecutive 2-hour interval groups (as an ordinal variable) were analyzed using Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient and presented graphically using LOESS smoothing function. The level of statistical significance was P <0.05 (two-tailed). R version 3.6.1 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria) and PSweight: An R Package for Propensity Score Weighting Analysis, as well as Statistica version 13.3 (TIBCO Software, CA, US), were applied for computational analyses.
Results
A total of 37 589 NSTEMI patients, who underwent PCI within the first 24 hours of admission, were included. The frequencies and percentages of patients in the groups stratified by 2-hour intervals of door-to-PCI time are shown in Figure 1.
The median door-to-PCI time was 2.7 (1.0–7.3) hours and was increasing during the study period in patients stratified by year of admission (Pfor trend <0.001) (Figure 2).
The median age of patients was 66.7 (IQR, 59.0–75.8), and two-thirds were male (66.7%). The median GRACE (Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events) score was 115 (98–133). Fifty-one percent of patients had multivessel disease on coronary angiography, and in 2% of patients, the left main was an in farct-related artery. Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was performed in 1.0% of patients, and 2.5% were referred for CABG after discharge. The baseline clinical, angiographic, and procedural characteristics and treatment prescribed on hospital discharge are shown in Table 1. The in-hospital mortality rate in the whole study group was 1.7%. The unadjusted 12-month mortality rate varied between 7.1% to 9.2% in the groups of patients who underwent PCI between 2–4 hours and 16–18 hours after admission, respectively (Figure 3A). The minimal unadjusted 36-month mortality rate was observed in the group who underwent PCI between 2–4 hours after admission, and the maximal mortality rate was in patients who received revascularization within 20–22 hours from admission (13.6% and 18.7%, respectively; Figure 4A). After adjustment for clinical and angiographic characteristics, there was a significant positive correlation between consecutive 2-hour-intervals of door-to-PCI time and the 12-month (rs = 0.61; P = 0.04) as well as 36-month (rs = 0.65; P = 0.02) mortality rates (Figures 3B and 4B).
Variables |
All patients (n = 37 589) |
Baseline characteristics |
|
Male sex, n (%) |
25 086 (66.7) |
Age, years, median (IQR) |
66.7 (59.0–75.8) |
Hypertension, n (%) |
29 228 (77.8) |
Hypercholesterolemia, n (%) |
17 250 (45.9) |
Obesity, n (%) |
8 242 (22.4) |
Previous stroke, n (%) |
1 384 (3.7) |
Current smokers, n (%) |
10 058 (26.8) |
Type 2 diabetes mellitus, n (%) |
9 960 (26.5) |
Chronic kidney disease, n (%) |
2 257 (6.0) |
Atrial fibrillation on admission, n (%) |
2 009 (5.3) |
Previous MI, n (%) |
8 912 (23.7) |
Previous PCI, n (%) |
7 983 (21.2) |
Previous CABG, n (%) |
2 185 (5.8) |
PAD, n (%) |
1 795 (4.8) |
LVEF <40%, n (%) |
4 128 (11.0) |
Pain-to-admission time, hours, median (IQR) |
5.7 (2.8–12.4) |
Killip class II, n (%) |
3 980 (10.6) |
GRACE Risk Score, median (IQR) |
115 (98–133) |
Door-to-PCI time, hour, median (IQR) |
2.7 (1.0–7.3) |
LM — IRA, n (%) |
766 (2.0) |
MVD, n (%) |
6 938 (51.4) |
CABG during the index hospitalization, n (%) |
380 (1.0) |
CABG planned after discharge, n (%) |
956 (2.5) |
Medical therapy at discharge |
|
Aspirin, n (%) |
34 890 (94.5) |
Clopidogrel, n (%) |
30 605 (82.9) |
Ticagrelor, n (%) |
2 462 (6.7) |
Prasugrel, n (%) |
401 (1.1) |
Beta-blocker, n (%) |
31 552 (85.5) |
ACE-I/ARB, n (%) |
30 093 (81.4) |
Statin, n (%) |
32 784 (88.7) |
Outcomes |
|
In-hospital mortality rate, n (%) |
638 (1.7) |
12-month mortality rate, n (%) |
2 935 (7.8) |
36-month mortality rate, n (%) |
5 550 (14.8) |
Discussion
Our study showed that longer door-to-PCI time in NSTEMI patients who underwent PCI within the first 24 hours from admission was associated with increased adjusted 12-month and 36-month mortality rates. Contrary to previous studies, which used different, mostly arbitrarily selected, cut-offs for defining “very early” invasive strategies [13], which limited the clinical applicability of these findings, we showed that increased door-to-PCI time was proportionally associated with increased mortality, i.e., the longer the in-hospital delay in PCI, the higher the mortality rate.
To date, only a few large randomized controlled trials aimed to compare the strategy of immediate or very early invasive coronary angiography with standard treatment in non-high-risk patients with NSTE-ACS. The VERDICT trial (Very Early Versus Deferred Invasive Evaluation Using Computerized Tomography) showed that very early invasive coronary evaluation (within 12 hours) does not improve primary outcome compared with the deferred strategy (within 48 to 72 hours), except for patients with the highest risk according to the GRACE risk score (>140) [5]. On the other hand, the randomized RIDDLE-NSTEMI Study (“Randomized Study of ImmeDiate vs. DeLayEd Invasive Intervention in Patients With Non-ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction”) demonstrated that immediate invasive intervention (<2 hours after randomization), as compared to the delayed intervention (2 to 72 hours, median 61 hours), was associated with a lower rate of death or new myocardial infarction at 30 days. It was mainly attributable to a decrease in the new myocardial infarction rate before catheterization in the immediate-intervention group [14]. The aim of a recent clinical trial (Early or Delayed Revascularization for Intermediate and High-Risk Non-ST-Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes; EARLY) was to compare very early (<2 hours) and delayed (12–72 hours) invasive strategies. In that study, the reduction of the primary endpoint (composite of cardiovascular death and recurrent ischemic events at one month) was observed in the very early invasive strategy group. However, it was driven only by a reduction in recurrent ischemic events [15]. On the other hand, another study (The Leipzig Immediate versus early and late PercutaneouS coronary Intervention triAl in NSTEMI; LIPSIA-NSTEMI Trial) showed no difference in terms of peak creatine kinase myocardial band (CK-MB) level in NSTEMI patients who underwent immediate invasive strategy [16].
Considering that “real-world” patients usually do not experience such long delays as patients in the deferred strategy groups in clinical trials, Mahendiran et al. [17] aimed to compare outcomes of propensity-score matched patients with door-to-catheter times <12 hours and 12–24 hours. They found no difference in one-year major adverse cardiovascular events between these groups. Contrary to that study, our analysis encompassed a significantly larger cohort. Moreover, we used overlap weighting, a novel statistical method that, compared to classic propensity score matching, allows for adjusted comparison of many groups. The advantages of this method are greatest when analyzed groups are initially very different in terms of baseline characteristics, as in the case of patients undergoing very early vs. delayed PCI [11, 12]. Although statistically significant, the association between the longer door-to-PCI time and increased mortality rates presented in our study was moderate, so it might be hardly detectable in the case of a small sample size.
Immediate or very early invasive strategies for NSTE-ACS were also compared to the delayed strategy in several other small randomized trials and observational studies, providing inconclusive results [18–20]. Inconsistent findings of those studies might result from non-negligible differences in timing strategies, definitions, study designs, sample sizes, or endpoints [21]. Moreover, the recent advances in the pharmacological management of NSTE-ACS might reduce the potential benefit of early PCI. Considering that our study took place in the years 2007–2019, utilization of modern guideline-recommended therapies, especially potent P2Y12 inhibitors in the study population, was low [22]. However, we included the admission year in the propensity score model to adjust our results for advances in pharmacological therapy over the study period.
Considering the results of this and other studies, it seems that in NSTEMI patients admitted directly to a PCI-capable center, avoiding unnecessary delays to PCI might be beneficial. It is of special importance in the context of increasing in-hospital delays in performing PCI in recent years, observed in our study. However, further randomized clinical trials are necessary to establish whether there is a benefit from this management.
Study limitations
The main limitation of our study was the observational study design. Therefore, our study could not confirm the causal relationship between time to PCI and mortality. Moreover, information on the cause of death (cardiovascular or non-cardiovascular) or incidence of other adverse events in the follow-up and values of myocardial injury markers were unavailable for the study cohort, so the mechanism of increased all-cause mortality in patients with longer door-to-PCI time remains unclear. In addition, previous studies showed that the outcomes of emergency PCI might be associated with operator volume [23]. However, we could not adjust our analysis results for this potential confounder due to the lack of operator-level data in the PL-ACS registry. Finally, the majority of patients underwent PCI within the first hours following admission, and the median door-to-PCI time was shorter than reported for other countries [17, 24]. The possible explanation might be the inclusion of only patients transported directly to the PCI-capable center because we could not establish other patients’ exact admission times. Moreover, obligatory on-site standby rather than having catheterization laboratory staff on call and local clinical practice in Poland may be associated with reduced delay to PCI. Therefore, the results may not fully apply to other healthcare systems.
Conclusions
After adjustment for clinically relevant confounders, in NSTEMI patients who were admitted directly to the PCI-capable center and underwent PCI within 24 hours from admission, there were higher 12-month and 36-month mortality rates associated with longer door-to-PCI time.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available at https://journals.viamedica.pl/kardiologia_polska.
Article information
Conflict of interest: None declared.
Funding: None.
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