The impact of increased age on outcome from a strategy of early invasive management and revascularisation in patients with acute coronary syndromes: retrospective analysis study from the ACACIA registry.
कीवर्ड
सार
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the impact of increased age on outcome from a strategy of early invasive management and revascularisation in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS).
METHODS
Retrospective analysis of a national Acute Coronary Syndrome registry (ACACIA).
METHODS
Multiple Australian (n=39) centres; 25% rural, 52% with onsite cardiac surgery.
METHODS
Unselected consecutive patients admitted with confirmed ACS, total n=2559, median 99 per centre.
METHODS
Management was at the discretion of the treating physician. Analysis of outcome based on age >75 years was compared using Cox proportional hazard with a propensity model to adjust for baseline covariates.
METHODS
Primary outcome was all-cause mortality. Secondary outcomes were bleeding and a composite of any vascular event or unplanned readmission.
RESULTS
Elderly patients were more likely to present with high-risk features yet were less likely to receive evidence-based medical therapies or receive diagnostic coronary angiography (75% vs 49%, p<0.0001) and early revascularisation (50% vs 30%, p<0.0001). Multivariate analysis found early revascularisation in the elderly cohort to be associated with lower 12-month mortality hazard (0.4 (0.2-0.7)) and composite outcome (0.6 (0.5-0.8)). Propensity model suggested a greater absolute benefit in elderly patients compared to others.
CONCLUSIONS
Following presentation with ACS, elderly patients are less likely to receive evidence-based medical therapies, to be considered for an early invasive strategy and be revascularised. Increasing age is a significant barrier to physicians when considering early revascularisation. An early invasive strategy with revascularisation when performed was associated with substantial benefit and the absolute accrued benefit appears to be higher in elderly patients.