Guidelines

Upcoming ESC revascularization guidelines cement heart team’s role


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM EUROPCR 2014

• But for patients with ST-elevation MI (STEMI) undergoing primary PCI, unfractionated heparin received the only unqualified, level I recommendation for anticoagulation, with bivalirudin receiving a level IIa, "should be considered" recommendation. This repositioning of the two options occurred, based to some extent on yet unpublished results from a very large, single-center study in Liverpool, HEAT-PPCI, reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology meeting in March that showed unfractionated heparin outperformed bivalirudin for 28-day outcomes, Dr. Neumann said. "I was very pleased and sort of amazed that results from HEAT-PPCI jumped into the guidelines, and it’s not even published yet. That [recommendation] will have an impact, I suspect," commented Dr. King.

• For patients with either STEMI or NSTEMI, the preferred antiplatelet P2Y12 inhibitors are prasugrel (Effient) and ticagrelor (Brilinta), with clopidogrel reduced to a back-up role "only when prasugrel or ticagrelor are not available," said Dr. Neumann. "I was a little surprised that clopidogrel has fallen off the charts. With the new stents having a low stent thrombosis rate, U.S. physicians tend to stick with clopidogrel; there has been more of a shift in Europe," commented Dr. King. "For elective cases, we still have a clear statement in favor of clopidogrel," countered Dr. Neumann. "It is only for higher risk, acute coronary syndrome and STEMI patients where the guidelines recommend the new agents."

Dr. Kolh said that he has received honoraria from Astra Zeneca and Braun, and research support from Edwards. Dr. Landmesser said that he had no disclosures. Dr. King said that he had no disclosures. Dr. Windecker said that he had received honoraria from, had been a consultant to, or had been a speaker for nine companies and had received research grants from seven companies. Dr. Neumann said that his institution had received research grants from 15 companies.

mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

Pages

Recommended Reading

Anti-TNFs linked to lower heart attack risk in RA patients
MDedge Cardiology
Activity improves heart-rate variability in elderly
MDedge Cardiology
VIDEO: GERD may increase heart attack risk
MDedge Cardiology
FDA declines to approve IV antiplatelet drug cangrelor
MDedge Cardiology
Testosterone therapy may not be associated with CV risk
MDedge Cardiology
Million Hearts indicators coming up short
MDedge Cardiology
Known cardiac disease common in sports-related sudden cardiac arrest in men
MDedge Cardiology
Adding insulin to metformin may raise CVD risks
MDedge Cardiology
Diabetes found in 17% of MI patients in registry
MDedge Cardiology
ECG predictors of cardiac events mandate troponin level testing in drug overdoses
MDedge Cardiology

Related Articles