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Symptoms as a predictor of the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI in stable coronary artery disease

Symptoms as a predictor of the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI in stable coronary artery disease
Symptoms as a predictor of the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI in stable coronary artery disease
Background: placebo-controlled evidence from ORBITA-2 (Objective Randomised Blinded Investigation with Optimal Medical Therapy of Angioplasty in Stable Angina-2) found that percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in stable coronary artery disease with little or no antianginal medication relieved angina, but residual symptoms persisted in many patients. The reason for this was unclear.

Objectives: this ORBITA-2 secondary analysis investigates the relationship between presenting symptoms and disease severity (anatomic, noninvasive, and invasive ischemia) and the ability of symptoms to predict the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI.

Methods: prerandomization symptom severity and nature were assessed using the ORBITA smartphone application and symptom and quality of life questionnaires including the World Health Organization Rose angina questionnaire (Rose). Disease severity was assessed using quantitative coronary angiography, stress echocardiography, fractional flow reserve, and instantaneous wave-free ratio. Bayesian ordinal regression was used.

Results: at prerandomization, the median number of daily angina episodes was 0.8 (Q1-Q3: 0.4-1.6), 64% had Rose angina, quantitative coronary angiography diameter stenosis was 61% (Q1-Q3: 49%-74%), stress echocardiography score was 1.0 (Q1-Q3: 0.0-2.7), fractional flow reserve was 0.63 (Q1-Q3: 0.49–0.75), and instantaneous wave-free ratio was 0.78 (Q1-Q3: 0.55-0.87). There was little relationship between symptom severity and nature and disease severity: angina symptom score with quantitative coronary angiography ordinal correlation coefficient: 0.06 (95% credible interval [CrI]: 0.00-0.08); stress echocardiography: 0.09 (95% CrI: 0.02-0.10); fractional flow reserve: 0.04 (95% CrI: −0.03 to 0.07); and instantaneous wave-free ratio: 0.04 (95% CrI: −0.01 to 0.07). However, Rose angina and guideline-based typical angina were strong predictors of placebo-controlled PCI efficacy (angina symptom score: OR: 1.9; 95% CrI: 1.6-2.1; probability of interaction [PrInteraction] = 99.9%; and OR: 1.8; 95% CrI: 1.6-2.1; PrInteraction = 99.9%, respectively).

Conclusions: although symptom severity and nature were poorly associated with disease severity, the nature of symptoms powerfully predicted the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI.

percutaneous coronary intervention, stable angina, stable coronary artery disease
0735-1097
13-24
Simader, Florentina A.
f8ed65d8-1a71-400a-8b50-9291fa43905f
Rajkumar, Christopher A.
6d202a4e-4ec9-44e4-89c2-f90e680c4afe
Foley, Michael J.
b4b3a4ab-b6eb-480f-a0c7-4d12cb17cdef
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
et al.
the ORBITA-2 Investigators
Simader, Florentina A.
f8ed65d8-1a71-400a-8b50-9291fa43905f
Rajkumar, Christopher A.
6d202a4e-4ec9-44e4-89c2-f90e680c4afe
Foley, Michael J.
b4b3a4ab-b6eb-480f-a0c7-4d12cb17cdef
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4

et al. and the ORBITA-2 Investigators (2024) Symptoms as a predictor of the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI in stable coronary artery disease. Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 84 (1), 13-24. (doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2024.04.016).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: placebo-controlled evidence from ORBITA-2 (Objective Randomised Blinded Investigation with Optimal Medical Therapy of Angioplasty in Stable Angina-2) found that percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in stable coronary artery disease with little or no antianginal medication relieved angina, but residual symptoms persisted in many patients. The reason for this was unclear.

Objectives: this ORBITA-2 secondary analysis investigates the relationship between presenting symptoms and disease severity (anatomic, noninvasive, and invasive ischemia) and the ability of symptoms to predict the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI.

Methods: prerandomization symptom severity and nature were assessed using the ORBITA smartphone application and symptom and quality of life questionnaires including the World Health Organization Rose angina questionnaire (Rose). Disease severity was assessed using quantitative coronary angiography, stress echocardiography, fractional flow reserve, and instantaneous wave-free ratio. Bayesian ordinal regression was used.

Results: at prerandomization, the median number of daily angina episodes was 0.8 (Q1-Q3: 0.4-1.6), 64% had Rose angina, quantitative coronary angiography diameter stenosis was 61% (Q1-Q3: 49%-74%), stress echocardiography score was 1.0 (Q1-Q3: 0.0-2.7), fractional flow reserve was 0.63 (Q1-Q3: 0.49–0.75), and instantaneous wave-free ratio was 0.78 (Q1-Q3: 0.55-0.87). There was little relationship between symptom severity and nature and disease severity: angina symptom score with quantitative coronary angiography ordinal correlation coefficient: 0.06 (95% credible interval [CrI]: 0.00-0.08); stress echocardiography: 0.09 (95% CrI: 0.02-0.10); fractional flow reserve: 0.04 (95% CrI: −0.03 to 0.07); and instantaneous wave-free ratio: 0.04 (95% CrI: −0.01 to 0.07). However, Rose angina and guideline-based typical angina were strong predictors of placebo-controlled PCI efficacy (angina symptom score: OR: 1.9; 95% CrI: 1.6-2.1; probability of interaction [PrInteraction] = 99.9%; and OR: 1.8; 95% CrI: 1.6-2.1; PrInteraction = 99.9%, respectively).

Conclusions: although symptom severity and nature were poorly associated with disease severity, the nature of symptoms powerfully predicted the placebo-controlled efficacy of PCI.

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Accepted/In Press date: 17 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 May 2024
Published date: 2 July 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024
Keywords: percutaneous coronary intervention, stable angina, stable coronary artery disease

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492066
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492066
ISSN: 0735-1097
PURE UUID: 224ac7a3-392d-48a0-b6d1-73d1de4ba275
ORCID for Nick Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

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Date deposited: 15 Jul 2024 16:51
Last modified: 23 Jul 2024 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Florentina A. Simader
Author: Christopher A. Rajkumar
Author: Michael J. Foley
Author: Nick Curzen ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.
Corporate Author: the ORBITA-2 Investigators

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