Impact of smoking on the outcome of patients treated with drug-eluting stents: 1-year results from the prospective multicentre German Drug-Eluting Stent Registry (DES.DE)

Impact of smoking on the outcome of patients treated with drug-eluting stents: 1-year results from the prospective multicentre German Drug-Eluting Stent Registry (DES.DE)

  • نوع فایل : کتاب
  • زبان : انگلیسی
  • مؤلف : Mohammad A. Sherif Christoph A. Nienaber Ralph Toelg Mohamed Abdel-Wahab Volker Geist Steffen Schneider Jochen Senges Karl-Heinz Kuck Ul
  • چاپ و سال / کشور: 2010

Description

Background Cigarette smoking strongly increases morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular causes, but the relevance of smoking in patients treated with drug-eluting stents (DES) is unknown. Aims To assess the impact of smoking on the presentation and outcome of patients treated with DES. Methods and results We analyzed data from the prospective multicentre German Drug-Eluting Stent Registry (DES.DE) and identified 1,122 patients who had never smoked and 1,052 patients who were current smokers. Smokers were younger (56.5 vs. 69.4 years, p\0.0001), more often males, with less frequent diabetes and hypertension compared to non-smokers. Smokers presented more often with acute coronary syndromes. After a mean followup of 12.5 months, smokers had both higher mortality (4.6 vs. 2.7%, p\0.05) and myocardial infarction (MI) rates (4.9 vs. 3%, p\0.01). There was no significant difference between smokers and non-smokers in the rate of target vessel revascularization (9.8 vs. 11.4%, p = 0.26). Major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (defined as the composite of death, MI and stroke, MACCE) were higher in smokers (10.6 vs. 6.1%, p\0.001). Moreover, after adjustment for baseline clinical and angiographic variables, smoking continued to be a strong independent predictor for MACCE (OR = 2.34, 95% CI 1.49–3.68). In a subgroup analysis, we found that the increased risk of smoking was most prominent in patients presenting with stable angina pectoris (OR = 3.71, 95% CI 1.24–2.57, p\0.05). Smoking almost doubled the risk for MACCE in acute MI patients, though this did not reach statistical significance (adjusted OR = 1.91, 95% CI 0.93–3.94, p = 0.74). Conclusion This large multicentre DES registry provides evidence that smokers treated with DES, despite lower incidence of predisposing risk factors for atherosclerosis, experience higher rates of death and MI compared to nonsmokers, particularly in the setting of stable coronary artery disease. Smoking has only marginal effects on target vessel revascularization rates in patients treated with DES.
Clin Res Cardiol (2011) 100:413–423 DOI 10.1007/s00392-010-0259-y Received: 1 March 2010 / Accepted: 16 November 2010 / Published online: 1 December 2010
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