Canadian Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection Cohort Study Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is an important cause of myocardial infarction (MI) in young to middle-aged women. OBJECTIVES: We aim to define the long-term natural history of SCAD. METHODS: We performed a multicenter, prospective, observational study of patients with nonatherosclerotic SCAD presenting acutely from 22 North American centers. We recorded baseline demographics, in-hospital characteristics, precipitating and predisposing conditions, angiographic features (adjudicated), in-hospital and 3-year major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). Cox regression multivariable analysis was performed. RESULTS: We prospectively enrolled 750 consecutive patients with SCAD from June 2014 to June 2018. Mean age was 51.7 ± 10.5 years, 88.5% were women (55.0% postmenopausal); 31.3% presented with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, and 68.3% with non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. Precipitating emotional stressor was reported in 50.3%, and physical stressor in 28.9%. Predisposing conditions included fibromuscular dysplasia in 42.9% (56.4% in those with complete screening), peripartum state 4.5%, and genetic disorders 1.6%. Most patients were treated conservatively (84.3%); 14.1% underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), 0.7% coronary artery bypass graft. At 3.0-year median follow-up, mortality was 0.8%, recurrent MI 9.9% (extension of previous SCAD 3.5%, de novo recurrent SCAD 2.4%, iatrogenic dissection 1.9%), with overall MACE 14.0%. Presence of genetic disorders, peripartum SCAD, and extracoronary fibromuscular dysplasia were independent predictors of 3-year MACE. Patients who underwent PCI at index hospitalization had similar postdischarge MACE compared with no PCI. At 3 years, 80.0% remained on aspirin and 73.5% on beta-blockade. CONCLUSIONS: Long-term mortality and de novo recurrent SCAD was low in our contemporary large SCAD cohort that included low revascularization rate and high use of beta-blockade and aspirin. Genetic disorders, extracoronary fibromuscular dysplasia, and peripartum SCAD were independent predictors of long-term MACE.

authors

  • Saw, Jacqueline
  • Starovoytov, Andrew
  • Aymong, Eve
  • Inohara, Taku
  • Alfadhel, Mesfer
  • McAlister, Cameron
  • Samuel, Rohit
  • Grewal, Tejana
  • Parolis, Johandra Argote
  • Sheth, Tej
  • So, Derek
  • Minhas, Kunal
  • Brass, Neil
  • Lavoie, Andrea
  • Bishop, Helen
  • Lavi, Shahar
  • Pearce, Colin
  • Renner, Suzanne
  • Madan, Mina
  • Welsh, Robert C
  • McGrath, Brent M
  • Vijayaraghavan, Ram
  • Har, Bryan
  • Ibrahim, Reda
  • Chaudhary, Pulkit
  • Ganesh, Santhi K
  • Graham, John
  • Matteau, Alexis
  • Martucci, Giuseppe
  • Ko, Dennis T
  • Humphries, Karin
  • Mancini, GB John

publication date

  • October 2022

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