Auteurs
Hauguel-Moreau M, Barthélémy O, Farhan S, Huber K, Rouanet S, Zeitouni M, Guedeney P, Hage G, Vicaut E, Zeymer U, Desch S, Thiele H, Montalescot G.
Abstract
Background
Critical culprit lesion locations (CCLL) such as left main (LM) and proximal left anterior descending (LAD) are associated with worse clinical outcome in myocardial infarction without cardiogenic shock (CS).
Aims
We aimed to assess whether CCLL identify a subgroup of patients with poorer prognosis when presenting with CS.
Methods
In the CULPRIT-SHOCK trial, a core laboratory reviewed all coronary angiograms to identify CCLL. A CCLL was defined as a culprit lesion with a >70% diameter stenosis of the LM, LM equivalent (>70% diameter stenosis of both proximal LAD and proximal circumflex), proximal LAD or last remaining vessel. We evaluated the primary study endpoint of the CULPRIT-SHOCK trial according to CCLL.
Results
A total of 269 (43%) out of 626 patients eligible for this analysis had a CCLL. Death or renal replacement therapy within 30 days, death within 30 days and death within one year were significantly higher in the CCLL than in the non-CCLL group (58.4% vs 43.4%, p<0.001, 55.8% vs 39.5%, p<0.001, 61.0% vs 44.5%, p<0.001, respectively). This was consistent after adjustment for baseline and angiographic characteristics. No interaction with the randomisation group (culprit lesion-only or immediate multivessel PCI) was found.
Conclusions
CCLL is frequent in CS and independently associated with worse clinical outcomes irrespective of the revascularisation strategy.