posted on 2012-10-24, 09:02authored byA. H. Gershlick, A. Stephens-Lloyd, S. Hughes, K. R. Abrams, S. E. Stevens, N. G. Uren, A. de Belder, J. Davis, M. Pitt, A. Banning, A. Baumbach, M. F. Shiu, P. Schofield, K. D. Dawkins, R. A. Henderson, K. G. Oldroyd, R. Wilcox, REACT Trial Investigators
The appropriate treatment for patients in whom reperfusion fails to occur after thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction remains unclear. There are few data comparing emergency percutaneous coronary intervention (rescue PCI) with conservative care in such patients, and none comparing rescue PCI with repeated thrombolysis.
background
The appropriate treatment for patients in whom reperfusion fails to occur after
thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction remains unclear. There are
few data comparing emergency percutaneous coronary intervention (rescue PCI) with
conservative care in such patients, and none comparing rescue PCI with repeated
thrombolysis.
methods
We conducted a multicenter trial in the United Kingdom involving 427 patients with
ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction in whom reperfusion failed to occur
(less than 50 percent ST-segment resolution) within 90 minutes after thrombolytic
treatment. The patients were randomly assigned to repeated thrombolysis (142 patients),
conservative treatment (141 patients), or rescue PCI (144 patients). The primary
end point was a composite of death, reinfarction, stroke, or severe heart
failure within six months.
results
The rate of event-free survival among patients treated with rescue PCI was 84.6
percent, as compared with 70.1 percent among those receiving conservative therapy
and 68.7 percent among those undergoing repeated thrombolysis (overall P = 0.004).
The adjusted hazard ratio for the occurrence of the primary end point for repeated
thrombolysis versus conservative therapy was 1.09 (95 percent confidence interval,
0.71 to 1.67; P = 0.69), as compared with adjusted hazard ratios of 0.43 (95 percent
confidence interval, 0.26 to 0.72; P = 0.001) for rescue PCI versus repeated thrombolysis
and 0.47 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.28 to 0.79; P = 0.004) for rescue
PCI versus conservative therapy. There were no significant differences in mortality
from all causes. Nonfatal bleeding, mostly at the sheath-insertion site, was more common
with rescue PCI. At six months, 86.2 percent of the rescue-PCI group were free
from revascularization, as compared with 77.6 percent of the conservative-therapy
group and 74.4 percent of the repeated-thrombolysis group (overall P = 0.05).
conclusions
Event-free survival after failed thrombolytic therapy was significantly higher with
rescue PCI than with repeated thrombolysis or conservative treatment. Rescue PCI
should be considered for patients in whom reperfusion fails to occur after thrombolytic
therapy
History
Citation
New England Journal of Medicine, 2005, 353 (26), pp. 2758-2768