Pretreatment with UFH at first medical contact in STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI was associated with an absolute 16% increase in IRA patency without causing excessive bleeding.
Does pretreatment with unfractionated heparin at first medical contact improve infarct-related artery patency in patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI?
Prehospital administration of unfractionated heparin at first medical contact improves infarct-related artery patency in STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI without increasing bleeding risk.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0% vs 0%
BACKGROUND: Primary PCI is the preferred reperfusion strategy in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). We investigated benefits and safety of pretreatment with unfractioned heparin (UFH) in STEMI referred to primary PCI. METHODS: Our single-center, open-label, randomized controlled trial assigned STEMI with ≤6 hours of symptom duration either to 70-100 IE/kg bolus of UFH at first prehospital medical contact (FMC) plus supplemental dose before PCI adjusted to activated clothing time ≥250 seconds or to control group undergoing standard UFH at the time of PCI. Primary efficacy endpoint was TIMI 2-3 flow in infarct related artery (IRA) at initial coronary angiography. Primary safety endpoint was BARC 3-5 bleeding during the index hospital stay. RESULTS: From March 2022 to February 2025, 298 patients were randomized to UFH pretreatment and 295 to the control group. Both groups were comparable in age, gender, risk factors, previous cardiovascular events and median delay from symptoms to coronary angiography (145 min vs 150 min; p=0.814). Median time from UFH pretreatment to coronary angiography was 60 min (25th and 75th IQR 47 - 55 min). TIMI 2-3 in IRA was documented in 43% in UFH pretreatment and 27% in control groups (RR 1.59 95% CI 1.27-1.98; p<0.001) without significant difference in BARC 3-5 bleeding (2.4% vs 2.0%; RR 1.16 95% CI 0.39-3.45; p=0.789). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI in a mature STEMI network, pretreatment with UFH at FMC was associated with an absolute 16% increase in IRA patency without causing excessive bleeding.
“Heparin has been sort of grandfathered into our treatments of many angioplasty and related procedures, and many of the early studies lacked the detail and the size we are now accustomed to over the last few decades.”
Fister et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Pretreatment with UFH at first medical contact in STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI was associated with an absolute 16% increase in IRA patency without causing excessive bleeding.