People with diabetes have a 30 per cent less chance of dying if they
undergo coronary artery bypass surgery rather than opening the artery
through angioplasty and inserting a stent, a new study has found.
Comparison of coronary artery bypass surgery
and percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with diabetes: a
meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
The
choice between coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) and percutaneous
coronary intervention (PCI) for revascularisation in patients with
diabetes and multivessel coronary artery disease, who account for 25% of
revascularisation procedures, is much debated. We aimed to assess
whether all-cause mortality differed between patients with diabetes who
had CABG or PCI by doing a systematic review and meta-analysis of
randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing CABG with PCI in the
modern stent era.
We
searched Medline, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of
Controlled Trials from Jan 1, 1980, to March 12, 2013, for studies
reported in English. Eligible studies were those in which investigators
enrolled adult patients with diabetes and multivessel coronary artery
disease, randomised them to CABG (with arterial conduits in at least 80%
of participants) or PCI (with stents in at least 80% of participants),
and reported outcomes separately in patients with diabetes, with a
minimum of 12 months of follow-up. We used random-effects models to
calculate risk ratios (RR) and 95% CIs for pooled data. We assessed
heterogeneity using I2. The
primary outcome was all-cause mortality in patients with diabetes who
had CABG compared with those who had PCI at 5-year (or longest)
follow-up.
Findings
The
initial search strategy identified 3414 citations, of which eight
trials were eligible. These eight trials included 7468 participants, of
whom 3612 had diabetes. Four of the RCTs used bare metal stents (BMS;
ERACI II, ARTS, SoS, MASS II) and four used drug-eluting stents (DES;
FREEDOM, SYNTAX, VA CARDS, CARDia). At mean or median 5-year (or
longest) follow-up, individuals with diabetes allocated to CABG had
lower all-cause mortality than did those allocated to PCI (RR 0·67, 95%
CI 0·52—0·86; p=0·002; I2=25%;
3131 patients, eight trials). Treatment effects in individuals without
diabetes showed no mortality benefit (1·03, 0·77—1·37; p=0·78; I2=46%; 3790 patients, five trials; pinteraction=0.03).
We identified no differences in outcome whether PCI was done with BMS
or DES. When present, we identified no clear causes of heterogeneity.
Interpretation
In
the modern era of stenting and optimum medical therapy,
revascularisation of patients with diabetes and multivessel disease by
CABG decreases long-term mortality by about a third compared with PCI
using either BMS or DES. CABG should be strongly considered for these
patients.
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