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Short-Term Consequences of Angiographically-Confirmed Coronary Stent Thrombosis
Authors:Christine G Kohn  Jeffrey Kluger  Meena Azeem  Craig I Coleman
Institution:1. Department of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy, Storrs, Connecticut, United States of America.; 2. The Evidence-Based Practice Center, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut, United States of America.; 3. Department of Cardiology, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut, United States of America.; S.G.Battista Hospital, Italy,
Abstract:

Objectives

To conduct a meta-analysis to quantify the real-world incidence of in-hospital or 30-day death or myocardial infarction (MI), and angiographically-confirmed ST-related treatment costs.

Background

The short-term clinical and economic consequences of coronary stent thrombosis (ST) are thought to be significant.

Methods

We searched MEDLINE, Embase and Scopus from January 2000-July 2012 to identify observational/registry studies that evaluated a cohort of ≥25 patients experiencing angiographically-confirmed thrombosis of a drug-eluting or bare-metal stent, required the use of dual-antiplatelet therapy for guideline-recommended durations, and reported incidences of in-hospital or 30-day death or MI and/or ST-related treatment costs. Incidences and costs from each study were pooled using random-effects meta-analysis.

Results

Twenty-three studies were included. Of the 13 studies reporting in-hospital outcomes, 12 (N=8,832 STs) reported mortality data, with the pooled incidence rate estimated to be 7.9%, 95%CI=5.4%-11.3%, I2=86%. Ten studies (N=1,294 STs) reported 30-day death, with a pooled incidence of 11.6%, 95%CI=8.8%-15.1%, I2=55%. Patients experiencing early ST (within 30-days of implant) had higher in-hospital and 30-day mortality than those experiencing very-late ST (interaction p<0.04 for both). Stent type had no significant effect on in-hospital or 30-day mortality. In the 5 studies (N=542 STs) and 3 studies (N=180 STs) reporting in-hospital and 30-day MI, respectively, the pooled incidence rates were 6.1%, 95%CI=2.1%-16.2%, I2=88% and 9.5%, 95%CI=3.8%-22.0%, I2=65%. One study reported costs associated with ST, estimating the median/patient cost of hospitalization to treat early ST at $11,134 (in 2000US$).

Conclusions

Regardless of stent type used, the short-term consequences of coronary ST appear significant.
Keywords:
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