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Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

Association Between Use of Bleeding Avoidance Strategies and Risk of Periprocedural Bleeding Among Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164. Background.

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Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

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  1. Association Between Use of Bleeding Avoidance Strategies and Risk of Periprocedural Bleeding Among Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  2. Background • Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is performed approximately 1 million times annually in the United States. • The safety of PCI continues to be excellent with very low rates of death, myocardial infarction (MI), and need for urgent revascularization. • PCI-related bleeding occurs in approximately 2-6% of patients in national PCI databases; marked institutional variability in rates exists. • Bleeding complications are associated with increased length of stay, hospital costs, and important clinical complications such as death and MI.

  3. Objective • To describe the use of 2 bleeding avoidance strategies—1) vascular closure devices and 2) bivalirudin—and associated post-PCl bleeding rates in a nationally representative PCI population. • Examine clinical usage patterns of these strategies as a function of bleeding risk. Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  4. Study Patients & Exclusions • NCDR® CathPCI Registry ® • Patients undergoing PCI via the femoral artery • Exclusion criteria: • >1 PCI procedure during same stay • Incomplete data on bleeding • PCI via radial, brachial artery • Cardiogenic shock • Missing device data • Death in cath lab • Unknown bleeding event data Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  5. Candidate Bleeding Avoidance Strategies • Bivalirudin • Vascular closure devices • Both therapies (bivalirudin + vascular closure) Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  6. Bleeding Risk Strata • Bleeding risk score calculated for each patient using NCDR bleeding risk model1 • Clinical elements used to calculate bleeding risk score: • STEMI/non-STEMI • Female sex • Previous CHF • No previous PCI • NYHA/CCS Class IV CHF • PVD • Age • Estimated glomerular filtration rate 1 Mehta et al. Circ Cardiovasc Intervent 2009;2:222-229 Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  7. Study Outcomes • In-hospital bleeding according to NCDR data definition: • Requiring transfusion and/or • Prolonged hospital stay and/or • Decrease in hemoglobin >3 g/dL Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  8. Statistical Analysis • Patients categorized into 3 groups of bleeding risk based on NCDR bleeding risk score: • Low (<1%) • Intermediate (1-3%) • High (>3%) • Propensity score matching with site adjustment using 26 clinical variables for each bleeding avoidance strategy performed to minimize confounding • Population was well matched (standard difference plot on next slide) Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  9. Standardized Difference Before and After Propensity Matching Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  10. Study Population Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  11. Patient Characteristics All P<0.001 Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  12. Patient Characteristics All P<0.001 Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  13. Patient Characteristics All data are N (%) All P<0.001 Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  14. Admission Characteristics All data are N (%) All P<0.001 Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  15. Hospital Characteristics All P<0.001 Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  16. High‡N=301,056 Low*N=475,152 Bleeding Rates* *Overall bleeding = 30,429 (2%) Intermediate†N=746,727 *NCDR bleeding risk <1%†NCDR bleeding risk 1-3%‡NCDR bleeding risk >3% M = Manual comp. C = Closure only B = Bival only BC = Bival+closure M C B BC M C B BC M C B BC M C B BC P<0.001 allintra-risk groupcomparisons Low(<1%) Intermediate(1-3%) High(>3%) Overall

  17. Estimated Bleeding Reductions—All Patients (Propensity Adjusted) Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  18. Estimated Bleeding Reductions (Propensity Adjusted) Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

  19. High‡N=301,056 Low*N=475,152 Bleeding Avoidance Strategy Use by Pre-PCI Bleeding Risk Risk-Treatment Paradox Intermediate†N=746,727 *NCDR bleeding risk <1%†NCDR bleeding risk 1-3%‡NCDR bleeding risk >3% M = Manual comp. C = Closure only B = Bival only BC = Bival+closure M C B BC M C B BC M C B BC P<0.001 for allintra-risk groupcomparisons Low(<1%) Intermediate(1-3%) High(>3%)

  20. Limitations • Observational, non-randomized study • Potential unmeasured confounding • No data on activated clotting time • Contraindications to use of bleeding avoidance therapies: • Bivalirudin: in the setting of other anticoagulants, PCI of chronic total occlusion • Vascular closure devices: high risk anatomy • Data insufficient to warrant abandoning use of manual compression in favor of vascular closure devices: • Adequately powered randomized trial assessing bleeding endpoints is needed

  21. Conclusions • In 1.5 million PCI patients in the NCDR: • Post-PCI bleeding occurred in 2% • Use of bivalirudin plus vascular closure devices was associated with an absolute 3.8% lower rate in PCI related bleeding in high risk patients • To prevent 1 bleeding event in high risk patients would require treating 33 patients with both therapies • High risk patients were least likely to receive both strategies (risk-treatment paradox) Marso et al. JAMA 2010;303:2156-2164

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