Abstract

Aims

The clinical value of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for chronic coronary total occlusions (CTOs) is not established by randomized trials. This study should compare the benefit of PCI vs. optimal medical therapy (OMT) on the health status in patients with at least one CTO.

Method and results

Three hundred and ninety-six patients were enrolled in a prospective randomized, multicentre, open-label, and controlled clinical trial to compare the treatment by PCI with OMT with a 2:1 randomization ratio. The primary endpoint was the change in health status assessed by the Seattle angina questionnaire (SAQ) between baseline and 12 months follow-up. Fifty-two percent of patients have multi-vessel disease in whom all significant non-occlusive lesions were treated before randomization. An intention-to-treat analysis was performed including 13.4% failed procedures in the PCI group and 7.3% cross-overs in the OMT group. At 12 months, a greater improvement of SAQ subscales was observed with PCI as compared with OMT for angina frequency [5.23, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.75; 8.71; P = 0.003], and quality of life (6.62, 95% CI 1.78–11.46; P = 0.007), reaching the prespecified significance level of 0.01 for the primary endpoint. Physical limitation (P = 0.02) was also improved in the PCI group. Complete freedom from angina was more frequent with PCI 71.6% than OMT 57.8% (P = 0.008). There was no periprocedural death or myocardial infarction. At 12 months, major adverse cardiac events were comparable between the two groups.

Conclusion

Percutaneous coronary intervention leads to a significant improvement of the health status in patients with stable angina and a CTO as compared with OMT alone.

Trial registration

NCT01760083.

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Comments

1 Comment
Difference from DECISION CTO
11 July 2018
Nanavati Superspeciality Hospital
This is a path breaking trial, the difference from DECISION-CTO being that non-CTO lesions in this trial (Euro CTO) were treated before randomization and baseline assessment, so only the difference in CTO treatment would affect SAQ changes.
However, although in DECISION-CTO, non-CTO lesions were treated after randomization and baseline assessment which could explain the improved SAQ, it could also mean that these non CTO lesions were the ones causing symptoms and treating them alone (with OMT for the CTO) produced the favorable results, indirectly confirming the results of DECISION CTO.
Submitted on 11/07/2018 12:36 PM GMT