PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Preventive angioplasty does not improve prognosis

Preventive angioplasty does not improve prognosis
2024-04-08
(Press-News.org) For heart attack patients, treating only the coronary artery that caused the infarction works just as well as preventive balloon dilation of the other coronary arteries, according to a new large study by researchers at Karolinska Institutet and others. The results are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Heart attack is a common disease with risks of serious complications. It has long been unclear what the best strategy is for treating narrowings in coronary arteries separate from the specific vessel that caused the infarction.

A new large Swedish study has investigated whether it is sufficient to treat only the coronary artery that caused the infarction, or whether long-term results are better if other narrowed vessels are also treated with balloon dilation as a preventive measure.

The clinical randomized study included 1542 patients from 32 hospitals in 7 countries. In the Swedish part, the SWEDEHEART registry was used to conduct the randomization and collect data. Patients were followed up for five years after the procedure.

The results show no difference between the groups in terms of new heart attacks, new unplanned balloon dilations or the total number of all-cause deaths.

"This is somewhat surprising. Our hypothesis was that it would be beneficial to do preventive angioplasty," says Felix Böhm, a senior physician at the Department of Clinical Sciences, Danderyd Hospital at Karolinska Institutet, who led the study.

However, when it comes to problems with angina, the study shows that it is possible to avoid patients coming back for new balloon dilations through preventive treatment. According to Felix Böhm, this suggests that we should still aim for complete treatment of all vessels.

"But for those patients where there is some circumstance that makes a complete revascularization complicated, one might choose to wait, since there was no difference in the most serious complications - new heart attack and death," says Felix Böhm.

If problems with angina occur, these patients can then come back later for a new treatment, according to Felix Böhm.

"A positive finding of the study was that most patients do not come back with new problems, regardless of the treatment strategy chosen. "Nowadays, heart attack patients are so well treated with drugs that it is difficult to find other interventions that provide further significant risk reduction," says Felix Böhm.

The researchers will now go on to investigate how angina and other quality of life parameters in the patients were affected by the different treatment strategies, as well as health economic aspects of the chosen strategy.

The research was conducted by Uppsala Clinical Research Center (UCR) at Uppala University. The legal sponsor was Karolinska University Hospital. The study was funded by the Swedish Research Council, Hjärt-Lungfonden, Region Stockholm, Abbott and Boston Scientific. The companies had no influence on study design, results analysis or article writing.

Publication: "FFR-Guided Complete or Culprit-Only PCI in Patients with Myocardial Infarction", Felix Böhm, Brynjölfur Mogensen, Thomas Engstrøm, Goran Stankovic, Ilija Srdnaovic, Jacob Lønborg, Sammy Zwackman, Mehmet Hamid, Thomas Kellerth, Jörg Lauermann, Olli A. Kajander, Jonas Andersson, Rikard Linder, Oskar Angerås, Henrik Renlund, Andrejs Ērglis, Madhav Menon, Carl Schultz, Mika Laine, Claes Held, Andreas Rück, Ollie Östlund, Stefan James, New England Journal of Medicine, online April 8, 2024, doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2314149

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Preventive angioplasty does not improve prognosis Preventive angioplasty does not improve prognosis 2 Preventive angioplasty does not improve prognosis 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Unveiling the world's skin: a map of global land cover from 2000-2020

Unveiling the worlds skin: a map of global land cover from 2000-2020
2024-04-08
A new study introduces the Hybrid Global Annual 1-km International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) Land Cover Maps for the period 2000-2020. This innovative dataset, free to access, marks a significant step forward in global land cover mapping, addressing longstanding issues of disagreement and incompatible classification systems among existing land cover products. Global land cover data, essential for environmental research, are plagued by inconsistencies across different datasets, complicating global change studies. The diversity in classification systems and methodologies challenges the creation of a unified, accurate land ...

Barbie may help physicians, patients have more productive telehealth visits

Barbie may help physicians, patients have more productive telehealth visits
2024-04-08
As telehealth visits become more prevalent, physicians can sometimes struggle to help patients effectively demonstrate a musculoskeletal exam through a screen. At the University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, one physician found a way to help pediatric patients demonstrate different joint movements using a Barbie doll. While on telehealth appointments with patients, Alecia Daunter, M.D., an assistant professor of pediatric rehabilitation medicine at U-M Health, found that verbally ...

Unnecessary use of beta-blockers after a heart attack

2024-04-08
Half of all patients discharged from hospital after a heart attack are treated with beta-blockers unnecessarily. This is according to a new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. "I am convinced that this will influence future practice", says Tomas Jernberg, Professor at Karolinska Institutet and lead researcher of the study. Today, when patients are discharged from hospitals after an acute heart attack, they are regularly treated with beta-blocker drugs such as metoprolol and bisoprolol. Now new research shows that about half of them do not benefit from the treatment and should not receive it at all. ...

The World Mitochondria Society keynote speakers announced: Professor Eric Schon and professor Howy Jacobs

The World Mitochondria Society keynote speakers announced: Professor Eric Schon and professor Howy Jacobs
2024-04-08
Save the Date for the 15th World Mitochondria Society Annua Meeting on October 29-31, 2024, at DoubleTree by Hilton Berlin Ku’damm, Berlin, Germany. The WMS is pleased to announce the participation of two distinguished keynote speakers for the Targeting Mitochondria 2024 conference in Berlin this October.   Keynote Speaker of Day 1: Prof. Eric Schon Professor Eric Schon from Columbia University, USA will deliver a presentation titled "Mitochondria in Alzheimer disease: it's not what you think". Prof. Schon challenges the conventional understanding ...

AACR: Combination treatment is well-tolerated, shows antitumor effects in KRAS G12C-mutated metastatic colorectal cancer

AACR: Combination treatment is well-tolerated, shows antitumor effects in KRAS G12C-mutated metastatic colorectal cancer
2024-04-08
ABSTRACT CT013 SAN DIEGO ― Combining the KRAS G12C inhibitor adagrasib with the anti-EGFR antibody cetuximab demonstrated promising anti-tumor effects in patients with KRAS G12C-mutated metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC), according to pooled results from the Phase I/II KRYSTAL-1 trial reported by researchers from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. The findings were presented today in a plenary session at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024 by Scott Kopetz, M.D., Ph.D., professor of Gastrointestinal ...

AACR: PARP1-selective inhibitor demonstrates early efficacy in breast cancers with DNA repair defects

AACR: PARP1-selective inhibitor demonstrates early efficacy in breast cancers with DNA repair defects
2024-04-08
ABSTRACT CT014 SAN DIEGO – The first-in-class PARP1-selective inhibitor saruparib demonstrated encouraging early efficacy and a favorable safety profile in patients with homologous recombination repair (HRR)-deficient breast cancers, according to results from the Phase I/II PETRA trial led by researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Results from the first-in-human trial were presented today at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024 by Timothy Yap, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., professor ...

City of Hope scientists present leading-edge research at American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting

2024-04-08
LOS ANGELES — Researchers with City of Hope®, one of the largest cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States, will present more than 70 abstracts and sessions on innovative clinical trial results, breakthrough diagnostic techniques and advances in treatment options as well as share their expertise on molecular profiling and the microbiome at the AACR Annual Meeting, which started April 5 and ends April 10 in San Diego.  In addition to City of Hope’s robust data being presented throughout the meeting, John D. Carpten, Ph.D., the Irell & Manella Cancer Center Director’s ...

Adagrasib plus cetuximab may provide clinical benefit in patients with KRASG12c-mutated colorectal cancer

2024-04-08
SAN DIEGO – A combination of the KRASG12C inhibitor adagrasib (Krazati) and the anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) antibody cetuximab (Erbitux) showed clinical activity and promising survival outcomes in a cohort of patients with metastatic, heavily pretreated, KRASG12C-mutated colorectal cancer, according to results from the phase I/II KRYSTAL-1 trial presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024, held April 5-10. The study was simultaneously published in Cancer Discovery. KRASG12C mutations occur in around 4% of colorectal cancers and are associated with a poor prognosis. Drugs targeting KRASG12C, such as adagrasib, have emerged ...

Next-generation PARP inhibitor demonstrates clinical benefit in patients with homologous recombination repair-deficient breast cancer

2024-04-08
SAN DIEGO – Saruparib, a selective inhibitor of poly-ADP ribose polymerase 1 (PARP1), demonstrated a promising objective response rate and progression-free survival in patients with certain homologous recombination repair (HRR)-deficient breast cancers, according to results from the phase I/II PETRA trial presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024, held April 5-10. Although blocking the enzyme PARP1 may be sufficient to prevent DNA repair in HRR-deficient tumors, all PARP inhibitors currently approved by the ...

An exosome-based liquid biopsy shows promise for early detection of pancreatic cancer

2024-04-08
SAN DIEGO – An investigational exosome-based liquid biopsy accurately detected 97% of stage 1-2 pancreatic cancers when combined with the biomarker CA 19-9, according to research presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024, held April 5-10. “Pancreatic cancer is one of the most fatal malignancies, in large part because the majority of patients are diagnosed only after the cancer has already metastasized,” said Ajay Goel, PhD, senior author of the study and the chair of the Department of Molecular ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New Japanese lily species identified, 1st addition to sukashiyuri group in 110 years

The popular kids in school may be sleeping less

Patients with rheumatoid arthritis have unique and complex autoantibody patterns

Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ hospital safety grade from The Leapfrog Group 

Survey finds young adults more likely to believe myths about sun protection and skin cancer prevention

Time zones and tiredness strongly influence NBA results, study of 25,000 matches shows

Premature menopause linked to increased musculoskeletal pain and likelihood of sarcopenia

Women are 40% more likely to experience depression during the perimenopause

World’s highest observatory explores the universe

$27 million to map 50 million human cells and uncover genetic fingerprints of disease

Validated rules help prevent overuse of CT scans for diagnosing traumatic head and abdominal injuries in kids

Closing the U.S./Mexico border during COVID-19 increased HIV transmission

Researchers at Houston Methodist find difference in pancreatic cancer cells, offering new hope for immunotherapy effectiveness

Withdrawal of stop-smoking pill could lead to thousands of avoidable deaths

CT-ing is believing: Zeiss Xradia 630 Versa micro-CT scanner supports materials, life sciences research

Breakthrough in complex pain management

Astronomers share climate-friendly meeting solutions

Missing link in species conservation: Pharmacists, chemists could turn tide on plant, animal extinction

Illinois researchers develop an AI model to reduce uncertainty in evapotranspiration prediction

Is it time to retire the best-before date?

An electrifying discovery may help doctors deliver more effective gene therapies

Lurie Children’s Hospital first-in-pediatrics to use technology that lights up lung cancer during surgery

$3.6 million to advance nuclear energy awarded to U-M

Two UT Arlington faculty honored for outstanding research

UT Arlington student links worm behavior to brain disease

Uncovering the secret of long-lived stem cells

The question for online educational platforms: offer courses following a schedule or release them on demand?

Study: racial bias is no 'false alarm' in policing

Ecological Society of America announces 2024 Fellows

Mass General Brigham researchers identify potential drivers of chronic allergic inflammation

[Press-News.org] Preventive angioplasty does not improve prognosis