ESC calls for greater awareness of potential for adverse events from bleeding as a result of PCI
Emerging evidence exists of a strong and potentially modifiable association between bleeding and adverse outcomes
2011-06-30
(Press-News.org) Sophia Antipolis, France: 30 June 2011: The European Society of Cardiology (ESC Working Group on Thrombosis) is calling for greater attention to be paid by health care staff to reducing bleeding in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI), and for increased research in the field. The position paper, published online today in The European Heart Journal, summarises current knowledge regarding the epidemiology of bleeding in ACS and PCI, and provides a European perspective on management strategies to minimise the extent of bleeding and subsequent adverse consequences.
"Increasing progress in the treatment of ACS - due to the combination of antithrombotic therapy in the acute phase and wider use of revascularisation techniques- has meant bleeding (previously a footnote in the therapeutic armamentarium) has come to play a far more significant role in patient outcomes," says the first author of the consensus article Philippe Gabriel Steg, from the Centre Hospitalier Bichaut-Claude Bernard (Paris, France).
Bleeding associated with PCI is caused by a combination of factors. "It may be as a result of antithrombotic treatments, or due to co morbidities, such as gastric ulcers or renal dysfunction. Additionally there's the trauma that is created in the arteries from puncturing the vessels," says Kurt Huber, a former chairman of the Working Group, from Wilhelminenspital Hospital (Vienna, Austria).
Emerging evidence exists of a strong and potentially modifiable association between bleeding and adverse outcomes. In 2006 a study by John Eikelboom, which examined the association between bleeding and death or ischemic events in 34 146 patients with ACS enrolled in a clopidogrel study, found that patients who experienced major bleeds had a fivefold higher incidence of death during the first 30 days, and a 1.5 fold higher incidence of death between 30 days and 6 months. 2
Furthermore, in both the OASIS 5 and HORIZONS trials, subjects who showed a marked reduction in bleeding went on to show a subsequent reduction in mortality. "We're coming to appreciate that this may not be entirely coincidental," says Steg.
One explanation proposed to explain the relationship between bleeding and adverse outcomes is that recognised predictors of bleeding may overlap with predictors of ischemic events, with bleeding acting as a marker for increased ischemic risk. "But a second possibility that's being debated is that bleeding may have directly harmful consequences that set in motion a number of adaptive changes which themselves lead to adverse outcomes," says Huber.
Any form of bleeding can have a clinical consequence. "For example, people who have a minor nose bleed or even bleeding gums when brushing their teeth may discontinue antiplatelet therapy if they've been implanted with a stent. The train of events might lead to in-stent thrombosis or even death," says Steg.
Strategies clinicians can introduce to minimise bleeding, says the position paper, include using radial as opposed to femoral access for angiography and PCI, and adjusting the dose of anticoagulant agents, where ever possible, to body weight, age and renal function.
"One issue is that we're treating increasingly older populations who are more likely to have decreased renal function making the possibility of anticoagulant overdoses greater," says Steg.
The Working Group on Thrombosis welcomes the recent efforts of the Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) to produce a consensus definition of bleeding for cardiovascular clinical trials. 3 The BARC definition, just published in Circulation, has been produced by an independent group of academics, research organisations (including the ESC), industry and regulator representatives:
"These definitions are based on consensus rather than data driven, making it important that they're validated in future clinical trials," says Huber.
The publication is nevertheless considered a major advance since until now there has been widespread confusion due to varying definitions of bleeding used in different clinical trials. "It's been well demonstrated that if the same study population is analyzed with different scales completely different rates of bleeding are likely to be recorded, with the rate of bleeding varying three fold according to the definition used," says Steg.
Bleeding, say the Thrombosis Working Group, should be reported using more than one bleeding scale, one of which should be the BARC bleeding definition. "Using more than one scale offers a way to minimise the potential for bias with selective reporting of bleeding events," says Steg.
For example, he says, investigators testing agents that have the potential to cause bleeding could minimise the reporting of adverse events by using a restrictive scale down playing bleeding; while investigators could over emphasis the safety of other agents by choosing sensitive scales.
Bleeding is an important subject for future research with gaps remaining in knowledge regarding the incidence of bleeding and the underlying mechanisms, concludes the position paper. Important questions for investigation on including whether bleeding is truly causal in subsequent mortality or merely a marker of increases risk related to worse baseline characteristics; whether the outcomes for spontaneous bleeding differ from bleeding induced by percutaneous or surgical revascularization procedures; and what should be the optimal transfusion strategy for patients with ACS?
INFORMATION:
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2011-06-30
Modern humans never co-existed with Homo erectus—a finding counter to previous hypotheses of human evolution—new excavations in Indonesia and dating analyses show. The research, reported in the journal PLoS One, offers new insights into the nature of human evolution, suggesting a different role for Homo erectus than had been previously thought.
The work was conducted by the Solo River Terrace (SoRT) Project, an international group of scientists directed by anthropologists Etty Indriati of Gadjah Mada University in Indonesia and Susan Antón of New York University.
Homo ...
2011-06-30
Biobanks are repositories for tissue samples, usually in the form of blood or saliva or leftover tissue from surgical procedures. These samples are collected and used for future research, including genetic research. They may be linked to personal health information regarding the sample donor. People who are eligible to donate these samples and researchers who want to use them face important questions with respect to whether and how informed consent should be obtained for sample and health information collection and use.
A team of University of Iowa researchers led by ...
2011-06-30
New Rochelle, NY, June 29, 2011—Sophisticated genetic tools and techniques for achieving targeted gene delivery and high gene expression levels in bone marrow will drive the successful application of gene therapy to treat a broad range of diseases. Examples of these cutting-edge methods are presented in a series of five provocative articles in the latest issue of Human Gene Therapy, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com). The articles are available free online at www.liebertpub.com/hum
Barese and Dunbar highlight the advances ...
2011-06-30
June 29, 2011 (Toronto) - The recurrence of an employee's medical leave of absence from work tends to happen much sooner with a mental health leave than a physical one, a Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) study shows.
Most workers who take a mental health leave from their jobs do not have another disability leave for at least two years, according to a new study from CAMH. In contrast, most who have had a physical health disability leave have almost four years before a second episode.
Mental health disability leaves cost approximately $51 billion a year ...
2011-06-30
A powerful new class of therapeutics, known as recombinant attenuated Salmonella vaccines (RASV), holds great potential in the fight against fatal diseases including hepatitis B, tuberculosis, cholera, typhoid fever, AIDS and pneumonia.
Now, Qingke Kong and his colleagues at the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University, have developed a technique to make such vaccines safer and more effective. The group, under the direction of Dr. Roy Curtiss, chief scientist at Biodesign's Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology, demonstrated that a modified strain of Salmonella ...
2011-06-30
Current or heavy smokers who were screened with low-dose spiral computed tomography (CT) scanning had a 20 percent reduction in deaths from lung cancer than did those who were screened by chest X-ray, according to results from a decade-long, large clinical trial that involved more than 53,000 people.
The study, called the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST), was conducted in individuals at high risk of developing lung cancer to compare the differences in death rates between smokers aged 55 to 74 who were screened annually with low-dose helical (or spiral) CT, versus ...
2011-06-30
NASA's Genesis mission crash-landed back on Earth in 2004. The spacecraft spent more than two years in orbit around the sun collecting solar wind, which consists of charged particles, on various ultra-pure collector materials.
Fortunately, the collector with the greatest scientific value survived the crash almost intact. Its primary purpose was to measure the relative abundances of the three isotopes of oxygen: 16O, 17O and 18O. Despite the length of the mission, the solar wind is so rarefied that the small number of atoms collected required a dedicated mass spectrometer, ...
2011-06-30
Milan, Italy, 29 June 2011 – Children with dyslexia often find it difficult to count the number of syllables in spoken words or to determine whether words rhyme. These subtle difficulties are seen across languages with different writing systems and they indicate that the dyslexic brain has trouble processing the way that sounds in spoken language are structured. In a new study published in the June issue of Elsevier's Cortex, researchers at Cambridge have shown, using a music task, that this is linked to a broader difficulty in perceiving rhythmic patterns, or metrical ...
2011-06-30
Atmospheric aerosol particles (otherwise known as Particulate Matter) have been masking the true rate of greenhouse gas induced global warming during the industrial period. New investigations show that the aerosol cooling effect will be strongly reduced by 2030, as air pollution abatements are implemented worldwide and the presently available advanced control technologies are utilized. These actions would increase the global mean temperature by ca. 1 degree Celsius. This is one of the main research outcomes of the recently concluded EU EUCAARI (European Integrated project ...
2011-06-30
Research carried out by scientists from the Peninsula Medical School at the University of Exeter and the National University of Singapore has analysed the complex 'cross talk' between hydrogen sulphide (H2S ) and nitric oxide (NO), both gasses that occur naturally in the body, and found that the interaction may offer potential strategies in the management of heart failure.
The research is published in the leading international journal Antioxidants and Redox Signaling.
Both gases interact naturally with each other within the body and the balance between the two and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] ESC calls for greater awareness of potential for adverse events from bleeding as a result of PCI
Emerging evidence exists of a strong and potentially modifiable association between bleeding and adverse outcomes