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Background: Anatomy is critical in risk stratification and therapeutic decision making in coronary disease. The relationship between anatomy and outcomes is not well described in PAD. We sought to develop an angiographic core lab within the VOYAGER-PAD trial. The current report describes the methods of creating this core lab, its study population, and baseline anatomic variables. Methods: Patients undergoing lower-extremity revascularization for symptomatic PAD were randomized in VOYAGER-PAD. The median follow up was 2.25 years. Events were adjudicated by a blinded Clinical Endpoint Committee. Angiograms were collected from study participants; those with available angiograms formed this core lab cohort. Angiograms were scored for anatomic and flow characteristics by trained reviewers blinded to treatment. Ten percent of angiograms were evaluated independently by two reviewers; inter-rater agreement was assessed. Clinical characteristics and the treatment effect of rivaroxaban were compared between the core lab cohort and noncore lab participants. Anatomic data by segment were analyzed. Results: Of 6564 participants randomized in VOYAGER-PAD, catheter-based angiograms from 1666 patients were obtained for this core lab. Anatomic and flow characteristics were collected across 16 anatomic segments by 15 reviewers. Concordance between reviewers for anatomic and flow variables across segments was 90.5% (24,417/26,968). Clinical characteristics were similar between patients in the core lab and those not included. The effect of rivaroxaban on the primary efficacy and safety outcomes was also similar. Conclusions: The VOYAGER-PAD angiographic core lab provides an opportunity to correlate PAD anatomy with independently adjudicated outcomes and provide insights into therapy for PAD. (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02504216).
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Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria , Enfermedad Arterial Periférica , Humanos , Rivaroxabán/uso terapéutico , Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria/diagnóstico por imagen , Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria/terapia , Extremidad Inferior , Angiografía , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Vasculares , Enfermedad Arterial Periférica/diagnóstico por imagen , Enfermedad Arterial Periférica/tratamiento farmacológico , Resultado del TratamientoRESUMEN
BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: Review how advanced imaging techniques and a multidisciplinary heart team approach are used to evaluate complex cardiac structural pathology. METHODS: Single-center retrospective case series. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac computed tomography angiography in addition to transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography impacts pre-procedural planning and procedural success.
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Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Cardíacos , Ecocardiografía , Humanos , Ecocardiografía/métodos , Estudios Retrospectivos , Ecocardiografía Transesofágica , Angiografía por Tomografía ComputarizadaRESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: To determine the association of smoking and HIV status with tissue-specific inflammation measured by flurodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET). DESIGN: A cross-sectional study. METHODS: We prospectively enrolled 55 HIV study participants on stable antiretroviral therapy and 19 age-matched HIV-uninfected controls without known cardiovascular disease. We measured aortic target-to-background ratio (TBR) and spleen standardized uptake values (SUV) 3-h post-FDG, and used regression models to examine the independent association of HIV and smoking status with PET variables. RESULTS: Overall, median (interquartile range) age was 50 (42-55) years; 81% were men and 54% were current smokers (median 0.5 packs/day, 25 pack-years]. Median CD4 of HIV study participants was 690âcells/ml and 88% had HIV-1 RNA less than 20âc/ml; 43% were on a protease inhibitor. In fully adjusted models, HIV was associated with 0.16 (95% confidence interval 0.04-0.27; Pâ=â0.009) higher aortic TBR, whereas current smoking was marginally associated with a lower TBR [-0.11 (95% confidence interval -0.23 to 0.01); Pâ=â0.07]. Spleen SUVmean was not associated with HIV or smoking, and there was no evidence for an HIVsmoking interaction for aortic or spleen models (all Pâ>â0.1). Spleen SUVmean was positively associated with biomarkers of inflammation and coronary artery calcium, but adjustment for traditional cardiovascular disease risk factors attenuated these relationships. CONCLUSION: The FDG-PET study of HIV study participants suggests that HIV is associated with increased aortic inflammation independent of traditional risk factors, but smoking is not. Future studies should continue to explore the mechanistic roles of smoking and inflammation at various stages of clinical and subclinical atherosclerotic vascular disease in HIV.
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Aortitis/epidemiología , Infecciones por VIH/complicaciones , Fumar/efectos adversos , Enfermedades del Bazo/epidemiología , Adulto , Aortitis/diagnóstico por imagen , Estudios Transversales , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Tomografía de Emisión de Positrones , Estudios Prospectivos , Medición de Riesgo , Enfermedades del Bazo/diagnóstico por imagenRESUMEN
Adults who underwent complex atrial baffling as children via Mustard or Senning procedures are at heightened risk for atrial arrhythmias. Antiarrhythmic therapies are typically ineffective in this population. Accordingly, our team of pediatric and adult electrophysiologists investigated the effectiveness of early invasive transbaffle-access techniques to perform early radiofrequency ablation at the source of these clinically significant arrhythmias. For this retrospective study, we selected 11 adult survivors of atrial baffling (mean age, 34 ± 9 yr) who underwent clinically indicated electrophysiologic study after no more than one trial of antiarrhythmic therapy. Using transbaffle-access techniques and 3-dimensional mapping of the venous atria, we found 12 inducible arrhythmias in 10 patients: intra-atrial reentrant tachycardia (n=6), atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (n=3), focal atrial tachycardia (n=2), and repetitive double firing of the atrioventricular node (n=1). Defining success as short- and midterm freedom from arrhythmia, we analyzed outcomes of radiofrequency ablation at 1 and 6 months. At 1 month, ablation was 100% successful. At 6 months, after 11 ablations in 9 patients, 5 patients had no clinical recurrence, 2 had improved arrhythmia control from minimal medical therapy, and 2 were to undergo repeat study for recurrent tachycardia. In the recurrence-free patients, arrhythmias during electrophysiology study matched the types found clinically before the study. To our knowledge, this is the largest one-year cohort of adult survivors of atrial baffling to have undergone study by a combined pediatric-adult electrophysiology team. We conclude that early invasive transbaffle access for ablating diverse atrial tachyarrhythmias was effective in these patients.