A hierarchical logistic regression model predicted residual angina 6 months after PCI with a c-index of 0.75, revealing that 24% of patients continued to experience angina post-procedure.
Cohort (n=2,573)
Sí
A newly developed predictive model using patient factors such as age, economic status, depression, and baseline antianginal use can accurately predict the likelihood of residual angina 6 months after PCI.
Estimación del efecto: c-index 0.75
AIMS: Angina relief is a major goal of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI); however, about one in five patients continue to have angina after PCI. Understanding patient factors associated with residual angina would enable providers to more accurately calibrate patients' expectations of angina relief after PCI, may support different follow-up strategies or approaches to coronary revascularization, and could potentially serve as a marker of PCI quality. METHODS AND RESULTS: Among 2573 patients who had PCI at 10 US hospitals for stable angina, unstable angina, or non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), 24% reported angina 6 months after PCI, as assessed with the Seattle Angina Questionnaire angina frequency score (categorized as none vs. any angina; score = 100 vs. <100). Post-PCI angina was more common in those patients treated for unstable angina (30 vs. 20% stable angina and 21% NSTEMI, P < 0.001). Using a hierarchical logistic regression model, eight variables were independently associated with angina after PCI, including younger age, poor economic status, depression, and greater number of antianginal medications at the time of PCI (c-index = 0.75). The amount of angina at the time of PCI was more predictive of post-PCI angina in patients with stable or unstable angina when compared with NSTEMI (pinteraction = 0.01). The model demonstrated excellent calibration, both in the original sample (slope 1.04, intercept -0.01, r = 0.98) and in bootstrap validation. CONCLUSION: Based on a large, multicentre cohort of PCI patients, we created a model of residual angina 6 months after PCI that can provide patients realistic expectations of angina relief, guide follow-up strategies, support the use of residual angina as a means of comparing PCI quality, and enable comparative effectiveness research.
Arnold et al. (Thu,) conducted a cohort in Stable angina, unstable angina, or NSTEMI (n=2,573). Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was evaluated on Angina 6 months after PCI (Seattle Angina Questionnaire score <100) (c-index 0.75). A hierarchical logistic regression model predicted residual angina 6 months after PCI with a c-index of 0.75, revealing that 24% of patients continued to experience angina post-procedure.
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