PCI is commonly performed for ischemic heart disease, or heart
problems caused by narrowed arteries, and for so-called acute
coronary syndrome, which is typically caused by clots or plaque in
the arteries. During PCI procedures, doctors thread a thin catheter
through the artery to place a tiny mesh cage known as a stent at the
site of blockage to prop open the vessel and restore blood flow to
the heart.
Patients who have a coronary stent placed are known to have an
increased risk of cardiac complications during and after non-cardiac
surgeries, especially when operations are done soon after PCI, said
Dr. Nathaniel Smilowitz of NYU School of Medicine, the lead author
of the study. That's why clinical guidelines recommend that, when
possible, surgeries be postponed for at least one year after PCI.
But some previous research suggests that up to 7.5% of patients
require surgery within the first six months of PCI and up to 20%
undergo surgery within two years, Smilowitz and colleagues note in
the American Heart Journal.
The current study examined data on 221,379 patients who had PCI.
Overall, 3.5% of these patients returned to the hospital for
non-cardiac surgery within six months, and 41% of these cases were
elective (non-emergency) surgeries.
"This study suggests that despite the guidelines to avoid surgery in
the first year after a stent, as many as about 30,000 patients each
year in the United States may wait fewer than six months before
surgery," Smilowitz said by email.
"Non-cardiac surgeries early after placement of a coronary stent
were associated with poor outcomes, and with an 8% risk of heart
attack or death during the hospital stay," Smilowitz said. "Patients
and providers should know these risks and avoid this scenario
whenever possible."
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Out of all the patients who returned for non-cardiac surgery within
six months of discharge after PCI, 339 of them, or 4.4%, died from
various causes, the study found.
The risk of death or a nonfatal heart attack was greatest for
non-cardiac surgeries performed within one month of discharge after
PCI.
"Patients who require coronary stents tend to be older adults with
other cardiac risk factors and many have other chronic illnesses,"
Smilowitz said. "These patients may also require non-cardiac surgery
to treat other ailments; in this study vascular surgery, orthopedic
surgery, and general abdominal surgery were the most commonly
performed surgeries in the first six months after placement of a
coronary stent."
One reason surgery can be risky after PCI is because patients are
prescribed blood thinners, including aspirin, to prevent blood clots
from developing after the placement of a stent in the arteries,
Smilowitz said.
"When these agents are discontinued prior to the operating room, the
inflammation associated with surgery can provoke blood clots within
the stent, which can cause a heart attack," Smilowitz said.
"When blood thinners are continued during non-cardiac surgery, there
is a significant risk of bleeding, which can be life threatening,"
Smilowitz added. "This balance of clotting and bleeding risk during
and immediately after surgery makes this a particularly vulnerable
time period for patients with coronary stents."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2HBhorx American Heart Journal, online July
22, 2019.
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