Cardiovascular News Issue 56—February 2020: US Edition

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February 2020 | Issue 56 David Taggart

EXCEL and heart teams Page 6

Nicolas van Mieghem

Profile

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NOBLE finds PCI inferior to CABG at five years in left main disease Five-year data from the NOBLE trial have confirmed its earlier findings that in patients with unprotected left main coronary disease the risk of major adverse cardiac or cerebrovascular events (MACCE) is higher with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) than with coronary artery bypass graft (CABG); the mortality risk was similar for both procedures. Published in The Lancet, the results come in the wake of an ongoing controversy surrounding the interpretation of data from EXCEL, which found that PCI was non-inferior to CABG in left main disease at five years.

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nalysing the findings for Cardiovascular News, David Hildick-Smith (Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust, Brighton, UK) said that the two trials are not incompatible: “People keep saying that the results of NOBLE and EXCEL are contradictory but they are, in fact, entirely consistent with each other. Broadly speaking, revascularisation is more common after PCI, but mortality is equivalent, particularly cardiovascular mortality. The endpoints of the studies were different, hence the apparent divergence of their results.” Adrian Banning (John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK) agreed. He told Cardiovascular News that, although the “headline results” implied that NOBLE favoured CABG and that EXCEL suggested that both therapies may be the same, “personally, I think there are a lot of things in common between the findings in EXCEL and NOBLE”. He said: “Within NOBLE, the outcomes in the less complex patients (those with low syntax score) are inferior to CABG and that is unexplained in my NOBLE investigator Evald Hoj Christiansen

mind, along with the slight excess of stroke in the PCI group. My view is that if you add NOBLE, EXCEL, COMBAT, SYNTAX, and SYNTAXES there is a very reassuring long-term message about the role of stents in the left main. Careful analysis of the patient and the angiogram almost always suggests the optimal treatment for an individual, and I do not think there are many patients where equipoise occurs.” Stephan Windecker (Bern University Hospital, Bern, Switzerland) described NOBLE as “another very important piece of evidence that requires careful review in the context of the totality of evidence”. Comparing the two trials, NOBLE investigators Niels Holm (Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark) and colleagues note in The Lancet: “The recent five-year report of EXCEL showed that mortality after PCI was 13% in EXCEL versus 9% in NOBLE, a difference that might be at least in part explained by the higher proportion of patients with diabetes in EXCEL compared with in NOBLE. The differences in outcomes in the early reports were

Jay Mathews

Thrombus aspiration in PCI Page 20

EXCEL: Repeat revascularisation after both CABG and PCI leads to increased mortality A secondary analysis of repeat revascularisation in the EXCEL trial has found it was associated with increased mortality after both percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) in patients with left main coronary artery disease (LMCAD). EXCEL investigators also noted that, consistent with previous studies, repeat revascularisation was performed less frequently following CABG than PCI, and suggested this may have contributed to the higher rate of all-cause mortality (non-significant) seen with PCI in the main EXCEL trial. The interpretation of EXCEL has been the subject of much recent debate that includes disagreements about how endpoints were measured and the reporting of mortality data. THE AUTHORS OF the current analysis concluded that reducing the need for repeat revascularisation may further improve long-term survival after percutaneous or surgical treatment of left main disease. In JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions, Gennaro Giustino (Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai, New York, USA) et al say: “Our findings in an unprotected LMCAD population suggest that the need for, and performance of, repeat revascularisation procedures have prognostic implications, the magnitude of which depends on its indication and type of repeat revascularisation procedure.” EXCEL was an international, open-label, multicentre, randomised trial that compared PCI using everolimus-eluting stents (Xience, Abbott) Continued on page 5

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