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Left ventricular unloading in high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention

Left ventricular unloading in high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention
Left ventricular unloading in high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention
Background: complex percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with severely impaired left ventricular function carries a high risk of death and complications. Whether percutaneous left ventricular unloading improves outcomes remains unclear.

Methods: we randomly assigned 300 patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction and extensive coronary artery disease in a 1:1 ratio to a strategy of elective unloading with a microaxial flow pump or to standard care during planned complex PCI. The primary outcome was a hierarchical composite that included death from any cause, disabling stroke, spontaneous myocardial infarction, hospitalization for cardiovascular causes, or periprocedural myocardial injury at a minimum of 12 months, as analyzed according to a win ratio.

Results: a total of 148 patients were assigned to receive a microaxial flow pump and 152 to receive standard care. At a median of 22 months (interquartile range, 16 to 30), 36.6% of pairwise comparisons favored the microaxial flow pump, and 43.0% favored standard care (win ratio, 0.85; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.63 to 1.15; difference, −6.4 percentage points; P = 0.30). Death from any cause occurred in 47 patients in the microaxial-flow-pump group and 33 in the standard-care group (hazard ratio, 1.54; 95% CI, 0.99 to 2.41). There was no material between-group difference in the risk of bleeding or vascular complications.

Conclusions: among patients with severely impaired left ventricular function undergoing complex PCI, elective left ventricular unloading with a microaxial flow pump did not reduce the risk of major adverse clinical outcomes at a minimum of 12 months. (Funded by the U.K. National Institute for Health and Care Research; CHIP-BCIS3 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT05003817.)
0028-4793
Perera, Divaka
4563666a-0406-4691-b9a6-2f8e54c89599
Ryan, Matthew
f724e2c8-c53e-4509-b387-7ea5d11bdc03
Ezad, Saad M.
8a252635-0817-4b75-b908-a6aadea183dc
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
et al.
CHIP-BCIS3 Investigators
Perera, Divaka
4563666a-0406-4691-b9a6-2f8e54c89599
Ryan, Matthew
f724e2c8-c53e-4509-b387-7ea5d11bdc03
Ezad, Saad M.
8a252635-0817-4b75-b908-a6aadea183dc
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4

Perera, Divaka, Ryan, Matthew, Ezad, Saad M. and Curzen, Nick , et al. and CHIP-BCIS3 Investigators (2026) Left ventricular unloading in high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention. New England Journal of Medicine, 394 (18). (doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2515704).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: complex percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with severely impaired left ventricular function carries a high risk of death and complications. Whether percutaneous left ventricular unloading improves outcomes remains unclear.

Methods: we randomly assigned 300 patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction and extensive coronary artery disease in a 1:1 ratio to a strategy of elective unloading with a microaxial flow pump or to standard care during planned complex PCI. The primary outcome was a hierarchical composite that included death from any cause, disabling stroke, spontaneous myocardial infarction, hospitalization for cardiovascular causes, or periprocedural myocardial injury at a minimum of 12 months, as analyzed according to a win ratio.

Results: a total of 148 patients were assigned to receive a microaxial flow pump and 152 to receive standard care. At a median of 22 months (interquartile range, 16 to 30), 36.6% of pairwise comparisons favored the microaxial flow pump, and 43.0% favored standard care (win ratio, 0.85; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.63 to 1.15; difference, −6.4 percentage points; P = 0.30). Death from any cause occurred in 47 patients in the microaxial-flow-pump group and 33 in the standard-care group (hazard ratio, 1.54; 95% CI, 0.99 to 2.41). There was no material between-group difference in the risk of bleeding or vascular complications.

Conclusions: among patients with severely impaired left ventricular function undergoing complex PCI, elective left ventricular unloading with a microaxial flow pump did not reduce the risk of major adverse clinical outcomes at a minimum of 12 months. (Funded by the U.K. National Institute for Health and Care Research; CHIP-BCIS3 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT05003817.)

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2026
Published date: 7 May 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511457
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511457
ISSN: 0028-4793
PURE UUID: 94e42b6d-fb20-4593-9d58-ab2863b06268
ORCID for Nick Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

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Date deposited: 15 May 2026 16:35
Last modified: 16 May 2026 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Divaka Perera
Author: Matthew Ryan
Author: Saad M. Ezad
Author: Nick Curzen ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.
Corporate Author: CHIP-BCIS3 Investigators

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