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Coronary Revascularization in Diabetic Patients: Optimizing Outcomes in 2007

David J. Cohen, M.D., M.Sc. Director of Cardiovascular Research Saint-Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute Professor of Medicine University of Missouri-Kansas City. Coronary Revascularization in Diabetic Patients: Optimizing Outcomes in 2007.

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Coronary Revascularization in Diabetic Patients: Optimizing Outcomes in 2007

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  1. David J. Cohen, M.D., M.Sc.Director of Cardiovascular ResearchSaint-Luke’s Mid America Heart InstituteProfessor of MedicineUniversity of Missouri-Kansas City Coronary Revascularization in Diabetic Patients:Optimizing Outcomes in 2007

  2. Atherosclerosis in Diabetes Mellitus: Pathophysiologic Considerations • Abnormal platelet function •  activation and adhesion in response to shear stress •  expression of GpIIb/IIIa receptors  aggregation • More diffuse atherosclerosis pattern • Impaired coronary flow reserve reduced tolerance of embolization •  plaque burden and more lipid-rich plaques predisposed to rupture • Impaired ability to develop collaterals larger MIs • Increased response to vascular injury •  rates of restenosis and reocclusion following both balloon angioplasty and bare stent implantation

  3. Diabetes No Diabetes Ref. Diam ( per mm) 3.3% Lesion length (per 5 mm) RR=1.5 Diabetes 2.1% Current Smoker P=0.012 Prior MI 0 1 2 Impact of Diabetes on Short- and Long-Term Outcomes of PCI Predictors of TLR (n=6186) 1-year mortality (n=6534) Cutlip DE et al. JACC 2002;40:2082-9 Bhatt et al. JACC 2000;35:922-8

  4. Adjusted RR = 2.38(95% CI 1.48-3.85) Freedom from Cardiac Death (%) No Restenosis Non-Occlusive Restenosis Occlusive Restenosis Years Relationship Between Restenosis and Mortality In Diabetic Patients • 513 diabetic pts underwent 6 month f/u angio and long-term clincal f/u • 10-yr survival • No restenosis: 24% • Non-occlusive: 35% • Occlusive: 59% • Occlusive (but not non-occlusive) restenosis associated with strong, independent risk of 10-year mortality (RR 2.4) Van Belle E et al. Circulation 001;103:1218-24

  5. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Drug-eluting stents– which stent for which patient? • What is the optimal antithrombotic regimen? • Discharge care and secondary prevention • Patient selection: PCI vs. CABG

  6. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Do they work in diabetic patients? • Differential effects in IDDM vs. NIDDM? • Is diabetes still a risk factor for restenosis in DES era? • Device selection • Is there a preferred DES for diabetic patients? • Insights from registries and comparative clinical trials Drug-Eluting Stents

  7. CYPHER Pooled: Diabetic Subgroup Angiographic Restenosis P<0.001 P<0.001  80%  79%

  8. Pooled TAXUS Trials (II, IV, VI) Overall Diabetic Subset: Angiographic Restenosis  80%P<0.001  87%P<0.001 (n=264) (n=263)

  9. SIRIUS – Reduced Efficacy in IDDM In-Segment Restenosis P=NS P<0.001 P<0.001

  10. CYPHER Trials-- Excluding SIRIUS In-Segment Restenosis P=0.06 P<0.001 P<0.001

  11. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Do they work in diabetic patients? • Differential effects in IDDM vs. NIDDM? • Is diabetes still a risk factor for restenosis in DES era? • Device selection • Is there a preferred DES for diabetic patients? • Insights from registries and comparative clinical trials Drug-Eluting Stents

  12. ISR rx Cardiogenic Shock Ostial lesion Female Diabetes Multivessel Dz Stent length(per 10 mm) Diabetes Ref. diam(per mm) Left main stenting Bifurcation stenting LAD 0.1 1 10 0.1 1 10 Independent Predictors of TVR after DES: RESEARCH and T-SEARCH Results Angio. Restenosis (n=238) 1-year MACE (n=1084) RR = 2.6 RR = 1.6 Lemos PA et al. Circulation 2004;109:1366-70 Ong ATL, et al. JACC 2005;45:1135-41

  13. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Do they work in diabetic patients? • Differential effects in IDDM vs. NIDDM? • Is diabetes still a risk factor for restenosis in DES era? • Device selection • Is there a preferred DES for diabetic patients? • Insights from registries and comparative clinical trials Drug-Eluting Stents

  14. Study Protocol Patients with Diabetes Mellitus (n = 250) TAXUS™ (n = 125) CYPHER® (n = 125) 1° EP:Late lumen loss at 6 months (in-segment analysis) 2 EP:Angiographic restenosis at 6 months  50% diameter stenosis (in-segment analysis) Target lesion revascularization at 6 months

  15. P<0.001 Angiographic Outcomes In-Segment Restenosis Late Loss (mm) P=0.03 P<0.001 In-Segment In-Stent

  16. P=NS 9-Month Clinical Outcomes P=0.16 P=NS

  17. Are the ISAR-Diabetes Findings Real?Comparison with SIRIUS and TAXUS * Results excluding SIRIUS Trial

  18. Nearly 500 diabetic lesions Are the ISAR-Diabetes Findings Real?Comparison with REALITY

  19. Summary: DES in Diabetes • Both sirolimus- and paclitaxel-eluting stents substantially reduce angiographic and clinical restenosis compared with BMS • Nonetheless, DES have not eliminated the excess risk of restenosis in diabetics c/w non-diabetics • Edge effects appear to be more severe in diabetic patients greater emphasis on stenting “normal to normal” • Head to head trials not entirely consistent 2 of 3 trials suggest a restenosis advantage with Cypher, but true magnitude of clinical benefit probably overestimated

  20. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Drug-eluting stents– which stent for which patient? • What is the optimal antithrombotic regimen? • Discharge care and secondary prevention • Patient selection: PCI vs. CABG

  21. Hemostatic Derangements in Diabetes • Increased platelet adhesion and activation in response to shear stress (P-selectin, Fibrinogen binding capacity) • Up-regulation of GpIIb/IIIa receptors associated with hyperglycemia, leading to enhanced platelet aggregation • Reduced capacity for endogenous thrombolysis • Intrinsic endothelial dysfunction less tolerant of in-situ thrombosis and distal embolization

  22. Diabetic/Placebo Diabetic/Abcix Non-diabetic/placebo Non-diabetic/ABcix 4.5% P=0.03 Death (%) 2.5% Days from randomization Mortality Benefit of Abciximab in Diabetic Pts • Pooled analysis of 1-year mortality from EPIC, EPILOG, and EPISTENT databases • Among patients with diabetes (n=1420), abciximab reduced 1-year mortality by 45% (20 lives saved per 1000 pts; p=0.03) • Mortality benefits particularly striking among diabetic patients with: • IDDM (4.2% vs. 8.1%, p=0.07) • Multivessel PCI (0.9% vs. 7.7%; p=0.02) Bhatt DL et al. JaCC 2000;35:922-8

  23. Are Gp2b/3a Inhibitors Still Beneficial in the High-Dose Clopidogrel Era? 1-Year Outcomes • ISAR-SWEET Trial • 701 diabetic patients (28% IDDM, 20% diet alone) undergoing elective PCI • Excluded any recent MI or ACS, angiographic thrombus, EF<30% • All pretreated with clopidogrel 600 mg at least 2 hrs prior to PCI • Randomized to abciximab vs. placebo • Primary Endpoint: 1-year D/MI Issues with ISAR-SWEET • Enrolled only low-risk diabetic patients • Observed 1-yr D/MI 8% vs. 14% expected • Trial dramatically underpowered to detect clinically meaningful differences in ischemic complications • Does not exclude a 40% reduction in 1-yr death or MI P=NS for all comparisons Death MI Death or MI Mehilli J et al. Circulation 2004;110:3627-35

  24. N=1606 1-year mortality – subgroups Results consistent across subgroups Bivalirudin better Heparin + GPI better H+GPI Bival All patients 2.5% 1.9% Eptifibatide Abciximab 2.2% 1.7% 2.7% 2.1% Age ≤75 Age >75 1.7% 1.6% 6.9% 3.6% Male gender Female gender 2.1% 1.7% 3.5% 2.5% Diabetes No diabetes 3.9% 2.3% 1.9% 1.7% Prior MI, PCI or CABG No prior MI, PCI or CABG 2.9% 2.1% 1.8% 1.6% Unstable angina <48h Unstable angina >48h 2.1% 1.2% 3.6% 1.5% Odds ratio ±95% CI for death at 12 months

  25. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Drug-eluting stents– which stent for which patient? • What is the optimal antithrombotic regimen? • Discharge care and secondary prevention • Patient selection: PCI vs. CABG

  26. Secondary Coronary Prevention in Diabetes

  27. Secondary Coronary Prevention in Diabetes

  28. Secondary Coronary Prevention in Diabetes

  29. Optimizing Outcomes in Diabetic PCI • Drug-eluting stents– which stent for which patient? • What is the optimal antithrombotic regimen? • Discharge care and secondary prevention • Patient selection: PCI vs. CABG

  30. BARI: Impact of Diabetes on Survival • BARI Subgroups • Treated diabetic pts only subgroup to show significant survival advantage with CABG • 5 year survival • CABG 81% • PTCA 65% Diabetic subgroup (p=0.006) CABG PTCA NEJM 1996;335:217-25

  31. Do Diabetics Have Increased Mortality After Multivessel Stenting? Summary: Stents do not appear to have significantly attenuated the mortality advantage of CABG in multivessel CAD * P<0.05 Yellow = Stent vs. CABG

  32. Recommendations for 2007:Which diabetic patients should undergo PCI? • Single-vessel disease • No evidence of involvement of proximal or mid-LAD (i.e., no LIMA) • Patients with 2 or 3 highly discrete lesions without evidence of diffuse atherosclerosis (I.e., “low risk”) • Patients with important contraindications to CABG • Previous CABG with patent LIMA • Advanced age

  33. If you are going to perform PCI… • Think twice (esp. in multivessel dz) • Use drug-eluting stents • Use a Gp 2b/3a inhibitor (or possibly bivalirudin + high dose clopidogrel) • Maximize secondary coronary prevention, even in the short-term • Optimal glycemic control • Aggressive lipid lowering (? LDL<80) • ACE-inhibition

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