Incidence and predictors of stent thrombosis: a single-centre study of 5,833 consecutive patients undergoing coronary artery stenting

Javaid Iqbal, Wael Sumaya, Victoria Tatman, Yasir Parviz, Allison C Morton, Ever D Grech, Stephen Campbell, Robert F Storey, Julian Gunn, Javaid Iqbal, Wael Sumaya, Victoria Tatman, Yasir Parviz, Allison C Morton, Ever D Grech, Stephen Campbell, Robert F Storey, Julian Gunn

Abstract

Aims: Stent thrombosis (ST) is an infrequent but potentially fatal complication of PCI. The reported incidence of ST varies from 0-5%, due to differences in definition of ST, inclusion/exclusion criteria, and the type of stent and dual antiplatelet therapy used. We aimed to examine the incidence of ST and associated risk factors in this "real-world, all-comers" study.

Methods and results: All patients undergoing PCI at South Yorkshire Cardiothoracic Centre (UK) between 2007 and 2010 were included, with no exclusion criteria. ST cases were divided into definite and probable ST, according to the ARC criteria. Univariate predictors were identified using Student's t-test and chi-square test, and entered into a Cox proportional hazards model to identify factors independently associated with ST. For 5,833 PCI patients followed up for two years, the incidence of definite and probable ST together was 1.9% (n=109); of these 73% were early, 11% late and 16% very late ST. Cardiogenic shock, ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), lack of dual antiplatelet treatment, diabetes mellitus, stent length and stent diameter were the independent predictors of ST.

Conclusions: The incidence of definite/probable ST in this "real-world" registry is 1.9%. Cardiogenic shock, often excluded in clinical trials, is the strongest independent predictor of ST.

Source: PubMed

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