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In-Hospital and 30-Day Mortality After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in England in the Pre-COVID and COVID Eras

In-Hospital and 30-Day Mortality After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in England in the Pre-COVID and COVID Eras
In-Hospital and 30-Day Mortality After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in England in the Pre-COVID and COVID Eras

BACKGROUND: Public reporting of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) outcomes is a performance metric and a requirement in many healthcare systems. There are inconsistent data on the causes of death after PCI, and the proportion of these deaths that are attributable to cardiac causes.

METHODS: All patients undergoing PCI in England between January 1, 2017 and May 10, 2020 (n = 273,141) were retrospectively analyzed according to their outcome from the date of PCI: no death, in-hospital death, postdischarge death, and total 30-day death. The present study examined short-term primary causes of death after PCI in a national cohort before and during COVID-19.

RESULTS: The overall rates of in-hospital and 30-day death were 1.9% and 2.8%, respectively. The rate of 30-day death declined between 2017 (2.9%) and February 2020 (2.5%), mainly due to lower in-hospital death (2.1% vs 1.5%), before rising again from March 1, 2020 (3.2%) due to higher rates of postdischarge mortality. Only 59.6% of 30-day deaths were due to cardiac causes, with the most common causes being acute coronary syndrome, cardiogenic shock, and heart failure, and this persisted throughout the study period. In the 30-day death group, 10.4% after March 1, 2020 were due to confirmed COVID-19.

CONCLUSIONS: In this nationwide study, we show that 40% of 30-day deaths are due to non-cardiac causes. Non-cardiac deaths have increased even more from the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, with 1 in 10 deaths from March 2020 being COVID-19 related. These findings raise a question of whether public reporting of PCI outcomes should be cause specific.

Acute Coronary Syndrome/epidemiology, Aged, COVID-19/epidemiology, Cause of Death/trends, Comorbidity, England/epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hospital Mortality/trends, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/mortality, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Survival Rate/trends, SARS-coV-2 rig F, England, Percutaneous coronary intervention, Outcomes, COVID-19, Deaths
1042-3931
E206-E219
Mohamed, Mohamed O
c9566561-5ab5-4d7b-b05d-079ebde7a279
Kinnaird, Tim
3cfe5aa5-eb28-4a4d-b2e4-6ea0799d85d0
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Ludman, Peter
28ef305d-e09e-40a7-84b4-6ccedfb37cc8
Wu, Jianhua
d1e83015-b7d2-4404-847e-c6f73e281759
Rashid, Muhammad
f974c0d2-bd55-4d93-940e-1cce3dd0fd59
Shoaib, Ahmad
87d9fdcb-a5ce-4379-8280-3115040dc364
de Belder, Mark
f0106dad-a7dd-4c54-a47e-03ec4c5c826f
Deanfield, John
3ffa04cf-a239-4dd7-8d77-dfc9cfe716fd
Gale, Chris P
96b5706c-fd86-4b41-9568-3d917ef2c805
Mamas, Mamas A
41515b72-75ff-4922-bb9f-8f9c63f9f5af
Mohamed, Mohamed O
c9566561-5ab5-4d7b-b05d-079ebde7a279
Kinnaird, Tim
3cfe5aa5-eb28-4a4d-b2e4-6ea0799d85d0
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Ludman, Peter
28ef305d-e09e-40a7-84b4-6ccedfb37cc8
Wu, Jianhua
d1e83015-b7d2-4404-847e-c6f73e281759
Rashid, Muhammad
f974c0d2-bd55-4d93-940e-1cce3dd0fd59
Shoaib, Ahmad
87d9fdcb-a5ce-4379-8280-3115040dc364
de Belder, Mark
f0106dad-a7dd-4c54-a47e-03ec4c5c826f
Deanfield, John
3ffa04cf-a239-4dd7-8d77-dfc9cfe716fd
Gale, Chris P
96b5706c-fd86-4b41-9568-3d917ef2c805
Mamas, Mamas A
41515b72-75ff-4922-bb9f-8f9c63f9f5af

Mohamed, Mohamed O, Kinnaird, Tim, Curzen, Nick, Ludman, Peter, Wu, Jianhua, Rashid, Muhammad, Shoaib, Ahmad, de Belder, Mark, Deanfield, John, Gale, Chris P and Mamas, Mamas A (2021) In-Hospital and 30-Day Mortality After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in England in the Pre-COVID and COVID Eras. Journal of Invasive Cardiology, 33 (3), E206-E219.

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Public reporting of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) outcomes is a performance metric and a requirement in many healthcare systems. There are inconsistent data on the causes of death after PCI, and the proportion of these deaths that are attributable to cardiac causes.

METHODS: All patients undergoing PCI in England between January 1, 2017 and May 10, 2020 (n = 273,141) were retrospectively analyzed according to their outcome from the date of PCI: no death, in-hospital death, postdischarge death, and total 30-day death. The present study examined short-term primary causes of death after PCI in a national cohort before and during COVID-19.

RESULTS: The overall rates of in-hospital and 30-day death were 1.9% and 2.8%, respectively. The rate of 30-day death declined between 2017 (2.9%) and February 2020 (2.5%), mainly due to lower in-hospital death (2.1% vs 1.5%), before rising again from March 1, 2020 (3.2%) due to higher rates of postdischarge mortality. Only 59.6% of 30-day deaths were due to cardiac causes, with the most common causes being acute coronary syndrome, cardiogenic shock, and heart failure, and this persisted throughout the study period. In the 30-day death group, 10.4% after March 1, 2020 were due to confirmed COVID-19.

CONCLUSIONS: In this nationwide study, we show that 40% of 30-day deaths are due to non-cardiac causes. Non-cardiac deaths have increased even more from the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, with 1 in 10 deaths from March 2020 being COVID-19 related. These findings raise a question of whether public reporting of PCI outcomes should be cause specific.

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More information

Published date: 1 March 2021
Keywords: Acute Coronary Syndrome/epidemiology, Aged, COVID-19/epidemiology, Cause of Death/trends, Comorbidity, England/epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hospital Mortality/trends, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/mortality, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Survival Rate/trends, SARS-coV-2 rig F, England, Percutaneous coronary intervention, Outcomes, COVID-19, Deaths

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 453792
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453792
ISSN: 1042-3931
PURE UUID: 840458e7-7253-41c4-93d7-e05bb71cda35
ORCID for Nick Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 24 Jan 2022 17:49
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: Mohamed O Mohamed
Author: Tim Kinnaird
Author: Nick Curzen ORCID iD
Author: Peter Ludman
Author: Jianhua Wu
Author: Muhammad Rashid
Author: Ahmad Shoaib
Author: Mark de Belder
Author: John Deanfield
Author: Chris P Gale
Author: Mamas A Mamas

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