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RIVIERA Registry Identifies Modifiable Predictors of Clinical Outcome in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

Barcelona, Spain (ots/PRNewswire)

Results of the multinational,
prospective, observational RIVIERA registry (Registry on IntraVenous
anticoagulation In the Elective and primary Real world of
Angioplasty) announced today at the World Congress of Cardiology
2006- joint meeting of the European Society of Cardiology & World
Heart Federation - in Barcelona show that routine PCI appears to be a
safe revascularisation procedure with a low rate of clinical
complications - death (0.3%), myocardial infarction (1.0%) and
bleeding episodes (3.4%). The RIVIERA registry, was performed between
2002 and 2005, during which time many technical improvements occurred
in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and adjunctive medical
therapy. RIVIERA identified several factors associated with an
increased risk of adverse clinical outcomes: PCI of the left main
trunk, PCI of coronary bypass grafts, and the clinical features of
the patients at presentation. RIVIERA also identified several
modifiable factors that may lead to improved clinical outcome: the
use of thienopyridine treatment (mainly clopidogrel) administered
before PCI, and the use of statins, and enoxaparin were associated
with less ischemic events. Radial access was also associated with
less ischemic events and bleeding. Use of GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors and
the use of both enoxaparin and UFH were associated with more bleeding
whereas enoxaparin alone was associated with less bleeding compared
to UFH.
The RIVIERA data were collected in 7962 patients in 144 hospitals
in 23 countries across 4 continents in order to characterise current
practice patterns in a wide range of clinical settings around the
world. The aims of RIVIERA were to characterise current practice
patterns in modern PCI with a wide representation of countries around
the world, to investigate the use of anticoagulation with
unfractionated heparin (UFH) or low molecular weight heparin (LMWH)
among patients undergoing elective or primary PCI, and to identify
independent predictors of adverse clinical and angiographic
complications following the PCI procedure.
Patients in the RIVIERA registry were a high-risk population with
a history of myocardial infarction (30%), a recent or ongoing
ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) (21%) or a recent
non-ST elevation-acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS) (36%). Ninety-two
percent of the population underwent elective PCI and 8% underwent
primary PCI. None of the patients were pre-treated with
antithrombotic therapy (UFH or LMWH) before undergoing PCI. During
the PCI procedure, most patients received either enoxaparin alone
(58%) or UFH alone (36%) and a few patients (6%) received either both
drugs and a different drug. Other in-hospital treatments included
aspirin in 95% of the patients, clopidogrel in 89%, ticlopidine in
12% and GP IIa/IIIb inhibitors in 18%.
"Our results confirm that the advent of new and improved devices
and techniques and the use of adjunctive antithrombotic therapy have
notably reduced the rates of major complications of PCI in the
routine clinical setting" said Gilles Montalescot MD PhD, Professor
of Cardiology at the Institut du Coeur, Hopital de la
Pitie-Salpetriere in Paris and Principal Investigator for the RIVIERA
registry. "It is very encouraging to see that many of the variables
associated with an increased risk of adverse cardiac outcomes
following PCI in the contemporary clinical setting are modifiable and
confirm the results of recent randomised trials; further improvements
in the clinical outcomes of PCI patients should be forthcoming"
Gilles Montalescot added.
The results of the RIVIERA registry not only provide data from a
real-world perspective but are also timely given the increasing use
of PCI in the treatment of acute coronary syndromes. More than 1
million PCI procedures are now performed worldwide each year. PCI is
commonly referred to as balloon angioplasty/coronary stent
implementation.
The RIVIERA registry was funded by sanofi-aventis.
More about percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)
PCI is a treatment procedure that unblocks coronary arteries that
have narrowed due to atherosclerosis or atherothrombosis. The
procedure is conducted to restore coronary arterial vascularization
(or coronary perfusion) in an acutely or subacutely occluded artery
during acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina or stable angina.
PCI includes balloon angioplasty and most often implantation of
intracoronary stent. The main long-term concern of PCI is
re-stenosis. However, the use of coated and drug-eluting stents have
been shown to reduce this risk.
Primary PCI is defined as intervention in the culprit vessel
within 12 hours after the onset of chest pain or other symptoms of
acute myocardial infarction. Elective PCI is performed in all other
less-urgent cases in patients with coronary artery disease.

Contact:

Pr G. Montalescot, Professor of Universities, Secretariat:
+33-(0)1-42-16-30-07, Telefax: +33-(0)1-42-16-29-31, Email:
gilles.montalescot@psl.ap-hop-paris.fr