• JAMA · Jan 2019

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Effect of Low-Dose Intracoronary Alteplase During Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention on Microvascular Obstruction in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

    • Peter J McCartney, Hany Eteiba, Annette M Maznyczka, Margaret McEntegart, John P Greenwood, Douglas F Muir, Saqib Chowdhary, Anthony H Gershlick, Clare Appleby, James M Cotton, Andrew Wragg, Nick Curzen, Keith G Oldroyd, Mitchell Lindsay, J Paul Rocchiccioli, Aadil Shaukat, Richard Good, Stuart Watkins, Keith Robertson, Christopher Malkin, Lynn Martin, Lynsey Gillespie, Thomas J Ford, Mark C Petrie, Peter W Macfarlane, R Campbell Tait, Paul Welsh, Naveed Sattar, Robin A Weir, Keith A Fox, Ian Ford, Alex McConnachie, Colin Berry, and T-TIME Group.
    • British Heart Foundation Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
    • JAMA. 2019 Jan 1; 321 (1): 566856-68.

    ImportanceMicrovascular obstruction commonly affects patients with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and is associated with adverse outcomes.ObjectiveTo determine whether a therapeutic strategy involving low-dose intracoronary fibrinolytic therapy with alteplase infused early after coronary reperfusion will reduce microvascular obstruction.Design, Setting, And ParticipantsBetween March 17, 2016, and December 21, 2017, 440 patients presenting at 11 hospitals in the United Kingdom within 6 hours of STEMI due to a proximal-mid-vessel occlusion of a major coronary artery were randomized in a 1:1:1 dose-ranging trial design. Patient follow-up to 3 months was completed on April 12, 2018.InterventionsParticipants were randomly assigned to treatment with placebo (n = 151), alteplase 10 mg (n = 144), or alteplase 20 mg (n = 145) by manual infusion over 5 to 10 minutes. The intervention was scheduled to occur early during the primary PCI procedure, after reperfusion of the infarct-related coronary artery and before stent implant.Main Outcomes And MeasuresThe primary outcome was the amount of microvascular obstruction (% left ventricular mass) demonstrated by contrast-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) conducted from days 2 through 7 after enrollment. The primary comparison was the alteplase 20-mg group vs the placebo group; if not significant, the alteplase 10-mg group vs the placebo group was considered a secondary analysis.ResultsRecruitment stopped on December 21, 2017, because conditional power for the primary outcome based on a prespecified analysis of the first 267 randomized participants was less than 30% in both treatment groups (futility criterion). Among the 440 patients randomized (mean age, 60.5 years; 15% women), the primary end point was achieved in 396 patients (90%), 17 (3.9%) withdrew, and all others were followed up to 3 months. In the primary analysis, the mean microvascular obstruction did not differ between the 20-mg alteplase and placebo groups (3.5% vs 2.3%; estimated difference, 1.16%; 95% CI, -0.08% to 2.41%; P = .32) nor in the analysis of 10-mg alteplase vs placebo groups (2.6% vs 2.3%; estimated difference, 0.29%; 95% CI, -0.76% to 1.35%; P = .74). Major adverse cardiac events (cardiac death, nonfatal MI, unplanned hospitalization for heart failure) occurred in 15 patients (10.1%) in the placebo group, 18 (12.9%) in the 10-mg alteplase group, and 12 (8.2%) in the 20-mg alteplase group.Conclusions And RelevanceAmong patients with acute STEMI presenting within 6 hours of symptoms, adjunctive low-dose intracoronary alteplase given during the primary percutaneous intervention did not reduce microvascular obstruction. The study findings do not support this treatment.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02257294.

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