Abstract 16233: Trends in Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PPCI) in Patients Presenting to Non-PCI Capable Hospitals With STEMI in New York State

IntroductionIn patients presenting to non-PCI capable hospital with STEMI, the management options include transfer for primary PCI (PPCI) or administration of thrombolytics and transfer for PCI (lytics + PCI), a decision largely driven by the estimated door to device time. The 2013 AHA/ACC STEMI gui...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inCirculation (New York, N.Y.) Vol. 138; no. Suppl_1 Suppl 1; p. A16233
Main Authors Iqbal, Sohah N, Bangalore, Sripal, Guo, Yu, Schoenfeld, Matthew, Keller, Norma, Slater, James
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc 06.11.2018
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract IntroductionIn patients presenting to non-PCI capable hospital with STEMI, the management options include transfer for primary PCI (PPCI) or administration of thrombolytics and transfer for PCI (lytics + PCI), a decision largely driven by the estimated door to device time. The 2013 AHA/ACC STEMI guidelines increased the door to device time for STEMI transfer patients from < 90 minutes to < 120 minutes. Whether this change has impacted management is not known.MethodsPatients in the New York (NY) State PCI Registry who underwent PCI (PPCI or lytics + PCI) for STEMI after being transferred from a non-PCI capable hospital in 2012 and 2014 were included in this study. Primary outcome was a change in the proportion of patients who underwent PPCI in relation to lytics + PCI in 2014 as compared with year 2012. Secondary outcomes were changes in transfer time (non-PCI capable transfer hospital door to PCI hospital door time), PCI hospital door to device time, transfer hospital door to device time in PPCI patients, and in-hospital mortality for all STEMI transfer patients who underwent PCI.ResultsThere were 2019 and 1799 patients who underwent PCI (PCI or lytics +PCI) for a STEMI after presenting to a non-PCI capable hospital in NY State in 2012 and 2014 respectively. There was an increase in the proportion of patients receiving PPCI (vs lytics+ PCI) from 2012 to 2014 (74.15% to 78.32%, p = 0.0025). Moreover, in patients receiving PPCI, there was also a decrease in transfer time [median102 min (Q1:73, Q3162) to 97 min (Q170, Q3:147),p = 0.005], PCI hospital door to device time [35 min (25,53) to 34 min (24, 51), p = 0.07), and transfer hospital door to device time [143 min (105, 220) to 134 min (102, 200), p = 0.005]. However, there was no change in mortality from 2012 to 2014 in all STEMI transfer patients who underwent PCI (2.13% vs 2.95%, p = 0.11).ConclusionsData from NY State indicates a significant increase in referral for PPCI in patients presenting with a STEMI to a non-PCI capable hospital with the change in guidelines increasing the door to device times for transfer patients. Whether such a strategy improves outcomes should be tested in further studies.
AbstractList IntroductionIn patients presenting to non-PCI capable hospital with STEMI, the management options include transfer for primary PCI (PPCI) or administration of thrombolytics and transfer for PCI (lytics + PCI), a decision largely driven by the estimated door to device time. The 2013 AHA/ACC STEMI guidelines increased the door to device time for STEMI transfer patients from < 90 minutes to < 120 minutes. Whether this change has impacted management is not known.MethodsPatients in the New York (NY) State PCI Registry who underwent PCI (PPCI or lytics + PCI) for STEMI after being transferred from a non-PCI capable hospital in 2012 and 2014 were included in this study. Primary outcome was a change in the proportion of patients who underwent PPCI in relation to lytics + PCI in 2014 as compared with year 2012. Secondary outcomes were changes in transfer time (non-PCI capable transfer hospital door to PCI hospital door time), PCI hospital door to device time, transfer hospital door to device time in PPCI patients, and in-hospital mortality for all STEMI transfer patients who underwent PCI.ResultsThere were 2019 and 1799 patients who underwent PCI (PCI or lytics +PCI) for a STEMI after presenting to a non-PCI capable hospital in NY State in 2012 and 2014 respectively. There was an increase in the proportion of patients receiving PPCI (vs lytics+ PCI) from 2012 to 2014 (74.15% to 78.32%, p = 0.0025). Moreover, in patients receiving PPCI, there was also a decrease in transfer time [median102 min (Q1:73, Q3162) to 97 min (Q170, Q3:147),p = 0.005], PCI hospital door to device time [35 min (25,53) to 34 min (24, 51), p = 0.07), and transfer hospital door to device time [143 min (105, 220) to 134 min (102, 200), p = 0.005]. However, there was no change in mortality from 2012 to 2014 in all STEMI transfer patients who underwent PCI (2.13% vs 2.95%, p = 0.11).ConclusionsData from NY State indicates a significant increase in referral for PPCI in patients presenting with a STEMI to a non-PCI capable hospital with the change in guidelines increasing the door to device times for transfer patients. Whether such a strategy improves outcomes should be tested in further studies.
Author Iqbal, Sohah N
Guo, Yu
Keller, Norma
Slater, James
Bangalore, Sripal
Schoenfeld, Matthew
AuthorAffiliation Dept of Medicine, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY
AuthorAffiliation_xml – name: Dept of Medicine, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Sohah
  surname: Iqbal
  middlename: N
  fullname: Iqbal, Sohah N
  organization: Dept of Medicine, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Sripal
  surname: Bangalore
  fullname: Bangalore, Sripal
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Yu
  surname: Guo
  fullname: Guo, Yu
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Matthew
  surname: Schoenfeld
  fullname: Schoenfeld, Matthew
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Norma
  surname: Keller
  fullname: Keller, Norma
– sequence: 6
  givenname: James
  surname: Slater
  fullname: Slater, James
BookMark eNqdj81OwzAQhC1UJFLgHfYIB0t2nJ-WG4qKmgNVpEZCnCq3LMQ02JW9IeJdeFgcxBNwGs3sfBrtnM2ss3jGEpmnGc9ytZyxRAix5KVK0ws2D-E92kKVecK-7_eBvD4QyCJV6g5aj_YlgLHQePOh_Rc06A8DaYtuCFA57-yU1pbQf6Il4yzcNE1V3_5CmkwMQ6QxTFf7BuRg4yyPFaj0Se97hLULJ0O6D_BkqINtu3qsJ3yDIzw7f4QtacIrdv4aO3j9p5cse1i11ZqPro_r4dgPI_pdh7qnbhd_EkrIkqdCLqQUheTRLzL1T-wHFlliqg
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright 2018 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc.
Copyright_xml – notice: 2018 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc.
DatabaseTitleList
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Medicine
Anatomy & Physiology
EISSN 1524-4539
EndPage A16233
ExternalDocumentID 00003017-201811061-03084
GroupedDBID -
.XZ
.Z2
01R
0R
1AW
1J1
29B
2WC
40H
4Q1
4Q2
4Q3
53G
5GY
5RE
5VS
71W
77Y
7O
7O~
8RP
AAAXR
AAMOA
AAMTA
AAPBV
AARTV
AAWTL
AAXQO
ABBUW
ABFLS
ABOCM
ABPMR
ABPTK
ABUFD
ABXVJ
ABZAD
ACDDN
ACEWG
ACGFS
ACRKK
ACWDW
ACWRI
ACXNZ
ADBBV
ADCYY
AENEX
AFCHL
AFUWQ
AHMBA
AHULI
AHVBC
AIJEX
AJIOK
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
AMJPA
ASCII
ASPBG
AVWKF
AWKKM
AZFZN
BAWUL
BOYCO
BQLVK
BYPQX
C45
CS3
DIK
DU5
E3Z
EBS
EJD
EX3
F2K
F2L
F2M
F2N
F5P
GX1
H0
H0~
H1
HZ
IKYAY
IN
IN~
JF9
JG8
JK3
K8S
KD2
KMI
KQ8
L-C
L7B
N9A
N~7
N~B
O0-
O9-
OAG
OAH
OBH
OCB
ODA
OGEVE
OHASI
OK1
OL1
OLG
OLH
OLU
OLV
OLW
OLY
OLZ
OPUJH
OVD
OVDNE
OVIDH
OVLEI
OVOZU
OWW
OWY
OXXIT
P2P
PQEST
PQQKQ
RAH
RHF
RIG
RLZ
RSW
S4R
S4S
UPT
V2I
W2D
WH7
WOQ
WOW
X3V
X3W
XZ
YZZ
Z2
ZA5
ZY1
~H1
ID FETCH-wolterskluwer_health_00003017-201811061-030843
ISSN 0009-7322
IngestDate Thu Aug 13 19:52:12 EDT 2020
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Issue Suppl_1 Suppl 1
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-wolterskluwer_health_00003017-201811061-030843
ParticipantIDs wolterskluwer_health_00003017-201811061-03084
ProviderPackageCode OVOZU
L-C
C45
7O~
AARTV
ABPMR
OLH
ASCII
BYPQX
OLG
AAMOA
ODA
ABZAD
ABBUW
JK3
H0~
1J1
OLV
OLU
JG8
OLW
OLZ
OLY
F2K
F2M
F2L
F2N
OHASI
AHVBC
KMI
OGEVE
K8S
OVLEI
AJIOK
OPUJH
V2I
.XZ
S4R
S4S
4Q1
OAG
4Q2
OVDNE
4Q3
AMJPA
OAH
OVD
71W
AHULI
ACEWG
.Z2
N~7
IKYAY
OVIDH
AWKKM
40H
N~B
OBH
X3V
X3W
ACDDN
ACWRI
BOYCO
AIJEX
AAXQO
~H1
AAMTA
AAAXR
OWW
OCB
OWY
01R
ACXNZ
OL1
AFCHL
ABXVJ
IN~
KD2
OXXIT
77Y
ACWDW
JF9
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2018-November-6
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2018-11-06
PublicationDate_xml – month: 11
  year: 2018
  text: 2018-November-6
  day: 06
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationTitle Circulation (New York, N.Y.)
PublicationYear 2018
Publisher by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc
Publisher_xml – name: by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc
SSID ssj0006375
Score 3.8694463
Snippet IntroductionIn patients presenting to non-PCI capable hospital with STEMI, the management options include transfer for primary PCI (PPCI) or administration of...
SourceID wolterskluwer
SourceType Publisher
StartPage A16233
Title Abstract 16233: Trends in Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PPCI) in Patients Presenting to Non-PCI Capable Hospitals With STEMI in New York State
URI http://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&NEWS=n&CSC=Y&PAGE=fulltext&D=ovft&AN=00003017-201811061-03084
Volume 138
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1Ra9RAEF56fRBFivaUWrXMg4gSUi7NXpL6dqbqnWI5aIX6dGzSPa6IG3pNkPpb_LHOTPY2W6zg-ZIcSyYkme-y306-mRHiRSaRs-pyHiok26E8H6hQxbhYSZNDpUpFFdxYIHucjL_Ij2fDs41e31MtNXWxX_68Na_kf7yKY-hXypJdw7PupDiAv9G_uEUP4_affDwqKFBR1kGE9CLmSLmTuE5tGYmpXpYNMkBNWtec6hXQ6MSXOiLJnE7zCQUIyLCttHrF6gxtG0lUwXFlQjwoyHF2pWyrVcMREtDWC2SW6FAyd3WgmMb63De_WJa2WdhtPYC8mMTksu1DEJxUC7Xovha9VQYnNKsMPsHXnXL6kA8Nx3y_Nt2XpUWlzdw24LZtzf0YR5Rxsl_iUElEvMuzMX5MJWfVLler6vpQOfGpsxjja6P2Ef-H0pTIZpjGbZL0vrazwQHid9hWW3LTRZx5_wvuvTqLAt4HkTcVjNj1HrHwB25U-B60C9M0pFuPaI0eUhUh2RO9OCKZ6tHkk2MXSZwOV90B6XLvifs_KhJWXH3jvAqPHZ0-EFt2WQOjFqMPxYY226I_Mqquvl_DS2ChMT_AbXHns9Vz9MWvFYKBr_oNtPiFCwMWv-DjF1b4BR-_8IrQ-5qNLHahwy7UFVjsgsUuOOwCYRcYu2SOkASCJDB2Hwn5_t1pPg5v3PmszRye_e1xxo_FpqmM3hEQyazIEl2UUZFJmRSHUg_lXCeDg_N5mmblE7HeqXfXPP6puNvB_JnYrJeNfo7kti722Nu_ASRWp9k
link.rule.ids 315,786,790
linkProvider Flying Publisher
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Abstract+16233%3A+Trends+in+Primary+Percutaneous+Coronary+Intervention+%28PPCI%29+in+Patients+Presenting+to+Non-PCI+Capable+Hospitals+With+STEMI+in+New+York+State&rft.jtitle=Circulation+%28New+York%2C+N.Y.%29&rft.au=Iqbal%2C+Sohah+N&rft.au=Bangalore%2C+Sripal&rft.au=Guo%2C+Yu&rft.au=Schoenfeld%2C+Matthew&rft.date=2018-11-06&rft.pub=by+the+American+College+of+Cardiology+Foundation+and+the+American+Heart+Association%2C+Inc&rft.issn=0009-7322&rft.eissn=1524-4539&rft.volume=138&rft.issue=Suppl_1+Suppl+1&rft.spage=A16233&rft.epage=A16233&rft.externalDocID=00003017-201811061-03084
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0009-7322&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0009-7322&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0009-7322&client=summon