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Ten-year all-cause mortality according to smoking status in patients with severe coronary artery disease undergoing surgical or percutaneous revascularization

Ten-year all-cause mortality according to smoking status in patients with severe coronary artery disease undergoing surgical or percutaneous revascularization
Ten-year all-cause mortality according to smoking status in patients with severe coronary artery disease undergoing surgical or percutaneous revascularization
Aims: to evaluate the impact of various smoking status on 10-year all-cause mortality and to examine a relative treatment benefit of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) vs. percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) according to smoking habits.

Methods and results: the SYNTAX Extended Survival study evaluated vital status up to 10 years in 1800 patients with de novo three-vessel disease and/or left main coronary artery disease randomized to CABG or PCI in the SYNTAX trial. In the present analysis, patients were divided into three groups (current, former, or never smokers), and the primary endpoint of 10-year all-cause mortality was assessed according to smoking status. Smoking status was available in 1793 (99.6%) patients at the time of randomization, of whom 363 were current smokers, 798 were former smokers, and 632 were never smokers. The crude rates of 10-year all-cause mortality were 29.7% in current smokers, 25.3% in former smokers, and 25.9% in never smokers (Log-rank P = 0.343). After adjustment for imbalances in baseline characteristics, current smokers had a significantly higher risk of 10-year all-cause mortality than never smokers [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR): 2.29; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.60–3.27; P < 0.001], whereas former smokers did not. PCI was associated with a higher risk of all-cause mortality than CABG among current smokers (HR: 1.60; 95% CI: 1.09–2.35; P = 0.017), but it failed to show a significant interaction between revascularization strategies and smoking status (Pinteraction = 0.910).

Conclusion: current smokers had a higher adjusted risk of 10-year all-cause mortality, whereas former smokers did not. The treatment effect of CABG vs. PCI did not differ significantly according to smoking status.

Clinical trial registration: SYNTAX: ClinicalTrials.gov reference: NCT00114972; SYNTAX Extended Survival. ClinicalTrials.gov reference: NCT03417050.
2047-4873
312–320
Takahashi, Kuniaki
ce404370-6f8b-443b-bd9f-ac499723f473
Thuijs, Daniel J.F.M.
a20f778e-a98b-478d-a848-a41446f4d707
Gao, Chao
249a2c6e-cf9a-4463-bd78-0f2ad7a17a3a
Ono, Masafumi
6aea6fe1-65c8-4747-864d-3b09797e7af8
Holmes, David R.
66df9a84-7b58-4212-a41f-4154a8361203
Mack, Michael J.
5fb155bd-62b4-46f4-b1ae-47f594673497
Morice, Marie-Claude
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Mohr, Friedrich-Wilhelm
96ed2d2f-5332-47dc-a2cb-67afe8ba319e
Curzen, Nick
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Davierwala, Piroze M.
c748d037-998c-4cff-a808-3887c2ecc49d
Milojevic, Milan
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Dawkins, Keith D.
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Wykrzykowska, Joanna J.
7f1370a3-8611-4974-9ee6-762884244eb0
de Winter, Robbert J.
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Mcevoy, John William
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Onuma, Yoshinobu
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Head, Stuart J.
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Kappetein, Arie Pieter
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Serruys, Patrick W.
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SYNTAX Extended Survival Study Investigators
Takahashi, Kuniaki
ce404370-6f8b-443b-bd9f-ac499723f473
Thuijs, Daniel J.F.M.
a20f778e-a98b-478d-a848-a41446f4d707
Gao, Chao
249a2c6e-cf9a-4463-bd78-0f2ad7a17a3a
Ono, Masafumi
6aea6fe1-65c8-4747-864d-3b09797e7af8
Holmes, David R.
66df9a84-7b58-4212-a41f-4154a8361203
Mack, Michael J.
5fb155bd-62b4-46f4-b1ae-47f594673497
Morice, Marie-Claude
8fad799e-b853-419c-a534-c570471dad6f
Mohr, Friedrich-Wilhelm
96ed2d2f-5332-47dc-a2cb-67afe8ba319e
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Davierwala, Piroze M.
c748d037-998c-4cff-a808-3887c2ecc49d
Milojevic, Milan
2cc58dab-3afb-45d5-b860-01cd32bf39db
Dawkins, Keith D.
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Wykrzykowska, Joanna J.
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de Winter, Robbert J.
d862390c-022f-4772-a0b0-26d4e1ae5abd
Mcevoy, John William
1c2f478a-940b-49ab-a360-3069eaf6b58d
Onuma, Yoshinobu
3bae88ea-1afa-43b2-bbd0-a68d72d78662
Head, Stuart J.
4f1afb04-0961-4c67-b6bf-cd1c786aca8f
Kappetein, Arie Pieter
32f2d1de-8630-4a3c-a3b8-2db139882bb6
Serruys, Patrick W.
98dfd61b-78fb-4f77-9995-7d9959332961

Takahashi, Kuniaki, Thuijs, Daniel J.F.M. and Gao, Chao , SYNTAX Extended Survival Study Investigators (2020) Ten-year all-cause mortality according to smoking status in patients with severe coronary artery disease undergoing surgical or percutaneous revascularization. European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, 29 (2), 312–320. (doi:10.1093/eurjpc/zwaa089).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims: to evaluate the impact of various smoking status on 10-year all-cause mortality and to examine a relative treatment benefit of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) vs. percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) according to smoking habits.

Methods and results: the SYNTAX Extended Survival study evaluated vital status up to 10 years in 1800 patients with de novo three-vessel disease and/or left main coronary artery disease randomized to CABG or PCI in the SYNTAX trial. In the present analysis, patients were divided into three groups (current, former, or never smokers), and the primary endpoint of 10-year all-cause mortality was assessed according to smoking status. Smoking status was available in 1793 (99.6%) patients at the time of randomization, of whom 363 were current smokers, 798 were former smokers, and 632 were never smokers. The crude rates of 10-year all-cause mortality were 29.7% in current smokers, 25.3% in former smokers, and 25.9% in never smokers (Log-rank P = 0.343). After adjustment for imbalances in baseline characteristics, current smokers had a significantly higher risk of 10-year all-cause mortality than never smokers [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR): 2.29; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.60–3.27; P < 0.001], whereas former smokers did not. PCI was associated with a higher risk of all-cause mortality than CABG among current smokers (HR: 1.60; 95% CI: 1.09–2.35; P = 0.017), but it failed to show a significant interaction between revascularization strategies and smoking status (Pinteraction = 0.910).

Conclusion: current smokers had a higher adjusted risk of 10-year all-cause mortality, whereas former smokers did not. The treatment effect of CABG vs. PCI did not differ significantly according to smoking status.

Clinical trial registration: SYNTAX: ClinicalTrials.gov reference: NCT00114972; SYNTAX Extended Survival. ClinicalTrials.gov reference: NCT03417050.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 September 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 November 2020
Published date: 30 November 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485449
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485449
ISSN: 2047-4873
PURE UUID: 3aa4edc0-0f15-4e7a-96cc-72597cc7a85e
ORCID for Nick Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

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Date deposited: 06 Dec 2023 17:49
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: Kuniaki Takahashi
Author: Daniel J.F.M. Thuijs
Author: Chao Gao
Author: Masafumi Ono
Author: David R. Holmes
Author: Michael J. Mack
Author: Marie-Claude Morice
Author: Friedrich-Wilhelm Mohr
Author: Nick Curzen ORCID iD
Author: Piroze M. Davierwala
Author: Milan Milojevic
Author: Keith D. Dawkins
Author: Joanna J. Wykrzykowska
Author: Robbert J. de Winter
Author: John William Mcevoy
Author: Yoshinobu Onuma
Author: Stuart J. Head
Author: Arie Pieter Kappetein
Author: Patrick W. Serruys
Corporate Author: SYNTAX Extended Survival Study Investigators

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