Browsing by Author "Milasinovic, Dejan G. (24823024500)"
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Publication Long-term follow-up of patients with chronic total coronary artery occlusion previously randomized to treatment with optimal drug therapy or percutaneous revascularization of chronic total occlusion (COMET-CTO)(2023) ;Juricic, Stefan A. (57203033137) ;Stojkovic, Sinisa M. (6603759580) ;Galassi, Alfredo R. (7004438532) ;Stankovic, Goran R. (59150945500) ;Orlic, Dejan N. (7006351319) ;Vukcevic, Vladan D. (15741934700) ;Milasinovic, Dejan G. (24823024500) ;Aleksandric, Srdjan B. (35274271700) ;Tomasevic, Miloje V. (57196948758) ;Dobric, Milan R. (23484928600) ;Nedeljkovic, Milan A. (7004488186) ;Beleslin, Branko D. (6701355424) ;Dikic, Miodrag P. (25959947200) ;Banovic, Marko D. (33467553500) ;Ostojic, Miodrag C. (34572650500)Tesic, Milorad B. (36197477200)Background: The COMET-CTO trial was a randomized prospective study that assessed long-term follow-up in patients with chronic total occlusion (CTO) in coronary arteries treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or with optimal medical therapy (OMT). During the 9-month follow-up, the incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) did not differ between the two groups; no death or myocardial infarction (MI) was observed. There was a significant difference in quality of life (QoL), assessed by the Seattle Angina Questionnaire (SAQ), in favor of the PCI group. Here we report long-term follow-up results (56 ± 12 months). Methods: Between October 2015 and May 2017, a total of 100 patients with CTO were randomized into two groups of 50 patients: PCI CTO or OMT group. The primary endpoint of the current study was the incidence of MACE defined as cardiac death, MI, and revascularization [PCI or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)]. As the secondary exploratory outcome, we analyzed all the cause-mortality rate. Results: Out of 100 randomized patients, 92 were available for long-term follow-up (44 in the PCI group and 48 in the OMT group). The incidence of MACE did not differ significantly between the two groups (p = 0.363). Individual components of MACE were distributed, respectively: cardiac death (OMT vs. PCI group, 6 vs. 3, p = 0.489), MI (OMT vs. PCI group, 1 vs. 0, p = 1), and revascularization (PCI: OMT vs. PCI group, 2 vs. 2, p = 1; CABG: OMT vs. PCI group, 1 vs. 1, p = 1). There was no significant difference between the two groups regarding the individual component of MACE. Six patients died from non-cardiac causes [five deaths were reported in the OMT group and one death in the PCI group (p = 0.206)]. Kaplan-Meier survival curves for MACE did not differ significantly between the study groups (log-rank 0.804, p = 0.370). Regarding the secondary exploratory outcome, a total of 15 patients died at 56 ± 12 months (11 in the OMT and 4 in the PCI group) (p = 0.093). The Kaplan-Meier survival curves for all-cause mortality rates did not differ significantly between the two groups (log rank 3.404, p = 0.065). There were no statistically significant differences between OMT and PCI groups in all five SAQ domains. There was a significant improvement in three SAQ domains in the PCI group: PL (p < 0.001), AF (p = 0.007), and QoL (p = 0.001). Conclusion: After 56 ± 12 months of follow-up, the incidence of MACE, as well as QoL measured by SAQ, did not differ significantly between the PCI and OMT groups. Copyright © 2023 Juricic, Stojkovic, Galassi, Stankovic, Orlic, Vukcevic, Milasinovic, Aleksandric, Tomasevic, Dobric, Nedeljkovic, Beleslin, Dikic, Banovic, Ostojic and Tesic. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Prognostic implications of bleeding measured by Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) categorisation in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention(2014) ;Matic, Dragan M. (25959220100) ;Milasinovic, Dejan G. (24823024500) ;Asanin, Milika R. (8603366900) ;Mrdovic, Igor B. (10140828000) ;Marinkovic, Jelena M. (7004611210) ;Kocev, Nikola I. (6602672952) ;Marjanovic, Marija M. (56437423000) ;Antonijevic, Nebojsa M. (6602303948) ;Vukcevic, Vladan D. (15741934700) ;Savic, Lidija Z. (16507811000) ;Zivkovic, Milorad N. (55959530600) ;Mehmedbegovic, Zlatko H. (55778381000) ;Dedovic, Vladimir M. (55959310400)Stankovic, Goran R. (59150945500)Objective To investigate the relationship between inhospital bleeding as defined by Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) consensus classification and short-term and long-term mortality in unselected patients admitted for primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Methods We analysed data of all consecutive patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) admitted for primary PCI, enrolled in a prospective registry of a high volume centre. The BARC-defined bleeding events were reconstructed from the detailed, prospectively collected clinical data. The primary outcome was mortality at 1 year. Results Of the 1808 patients with STEMI admitted for primary PCI, 115 (6.4%) experienced a BARC type ≥2 bleeding. As the BARC bleeding severity worsened, there was a gradient of increasing rates of 1-year death. The 1-year mortality rate increased from 11.5% with BARC 0+1 type to 43.5% with BARC type 3b bleeding. After multivariable adjustment for demographic and clinical characteristics of patients, the independent predictors of 1-year death were BARC type 3a (HR 1.99; 95% CI 1.16 to 3.40, p=0.012) and BARC type 3b bleeding (HR 3.22; 95% CI 1.67 to 6.20, p<0.0001). Conclusions The present study demonstrated that bleeding events defined according to the BARC classification hierarchically correlate with 1-year mortality after admission for primary PCI. The strongest predictor of 1-year mortality is the BARC type 3b bleeding.
