Title of article :
Percutaneous transmyocardial laser revascularisation for severe angina: the PACIFIC randomised trial
Author/Authors :
Stephen N. Oesterle، نويسنده , , Timothy A. Sanborn، نويسنده , , Nadir Ali MD، نويسنده , , Jon Resar، نويسنده , , Stephen R Ramee، نويسنده , , Richard Heuser MD FACC، نويسنده , , Larry Dean، نويسنده , , William Knopf، نويسنده , , Peter Schofield، نويسنده , , Gary L Schaer، نويسنده , , Guy Reeder، نويسنده , , Ronald Masden، نويسنده , , Alan C Yeung، نويسنده , , Daniel Burkhoff، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
6
From page :
1705
To page :
1710
Abstract :
Background Percutaneous transmyocardial laser revascularisation (PTMR) is a proposed catheter-based therapy for refractory angina pectoris when bypass surgery or angioplasty is not possible. We undertook a randomised trial to assess the safety and efficacy of this technique. Methods 221 patients with reversible ischaemia of Canadian Cardiovascular Society angina class III (61%) or IV (39%) and incomplete response to other therapies were recruited from 13 centres. Patients were randomly assigned PTMR with a holmium:YAG laser plus continued medical treatment (n=110) or continued medical treatment only (n=111). The primary endpoint was the exercise tolerance at 12 months. Analyses were by intention to treat. Findings 11 patients died and 19 withdrew; 92 PTMR-group and 99 medical-treatment-group patients completed the study. Exercise tolerance at 12 months had increased by a median of 89·0 s (IQR -15 to 183) with PTMR compared with 12·5 s (−67 to 125) with medical treatment only (p=0·008). On masked assessment, angina class was II or lower in 34·1% of PTMR patients compared with 13·0% of those medically treated. All indices of the Seattle angina questionnaire improved more with PTMR than with medical care only. By 12 months there had been eight deaths in the PTMR group and three in the medical treatment group, with similar survival in the two groups. Interpretation PTMR was associated with increased exercise tolerance time, low morbidity, lower angina scores assessed by masked reviewers, and improved quality of life. Although there is controversy about the mechanism of action, and the contribution of the placebo effect cannot be quantified, this unmasked study suggests that this palliative procedure provides some clinical benefits in the defined population of patients.
Journal title :
The Lancet
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
The Lancet
Record number :
553640
Link To Document :
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