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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 44, 471-486, Copyright © 1987 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
WO Myers, BJ Gersh, LD Fisher, MB Mock, DR Holmes, HV Schaff, S Gillispie, TJ Ryan and GC Kaiser
Results of coronary artery bypass grafting were evaluated in 856
nonrandomized patients in the Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) registry
with mild angina (Canadian Cardiovascular Society Classes I and II) and
three-vessel disease, defined as 70% or more stenosis in the proximal or
middle segment of the three major coronary arteries. There were 413
patients with medical therapy and 443 with early operation. Patients with
delayed operation were kept in the medical group for analysis. Six-year
survival adjusted for left ventricular (LV) function and number of proximal
stenoses was 67% for medical and 84% for surgical patients (p less than
0.0001). Patients with normal LV function had equal survival with medicine
or surgical intervention. Those with mild or moderate LV dysfunction (CASS
LV wall motion score 6 to 9 and 10 to 15, respectively) and at least one
proximal stenosis (the dominant right coronary artery) had increased
probability of being alive at six years with surgical treatment. In
patients with severe LV impairment (LV score higher than 15) and in those
whose only proximal stenosis of 70% or more (in three-vessel disease) was
located in the left anterior descending coronary artery, increased survival
with surgical treatment could not be demonstrated. This is a nonrandomized
observational study with the limitations of such studies: the need to
adjust for differences in baseline traits between medical and surgical
groups and the possibility of an unrecognized imbalance in baseline
characteristics. In a Cox analysis of variables influencing outcome, early
surgical treatment was an independent predictor of survival with 43% the
risk of medical treatment (95% confidence range: 29 to 62%). Adjustment by
propensity analysis to reduce selection bias from known differences in
baseline variables did not alter results.
ARTICLES
Medical versus early surgical therapy in patients with triple-vessel disease and mild angina pectoris: a CASS registry study of survival
Marshfield Clinic, WI 54449.
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